WEBVTT 00:00:00.167 --> 00:00:03.181 Recently I visited Beloit, Wisconsin. 00:00:03.181 --> 00:00:06.829 And I was there to honor a great 20th century explorer, 00:00:06.829 --> 00:00:08.871 Roy Chapman Andrews. 00:00:08.871 --> 00:00:11.715 During his time at the American Museum of Natural History, 00:00:11.715 --> 00:00:15.815 Andrews led a range of expeditions to uncharted regions, 00:00:15.815 --> 00:00:17.550 like here in the Gobi Desert. 00:00:17.550 --> 00:00:18.958 He was quite a figure. 00:00:18.958 --> 00:00:22.632 He was later, it's said, the basis of the Indiana Jones character. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:22.632 --> 00:00:24.829 And when I was in Beloit, Wisconsin, 00:00:24.829 --> 00:00:28.962 I gave a public lecture to a group of middle school students. 00:00:28.962 --> 00:00:30.531 And I'm here to tell you, 00:00:30.531 --> 00:00:33.235 if there's anything more intimidating than talking here at TED, 00:00:33.235 --> 00:00:35.067 it'll be trying to hold the attention 00:00:35.067 --> 00:00:38.960 of a group of a thousand 12-year-olds for a 45-minute lecture. 00:00:38.960 --> 00:00:40.839 Don't try that one. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:40.839 --> 00:00:44.381 At the end of the lecture they asked a number of questions, 00:00:44.381 --> 00:00:47.683 but there was one that's really stuck with me since then. 00:00:47.683 --> 00:00:49.600 There was a young girl who stood up, 00:00:49.600 --> 00:00:50.931 and she asked the question: 00:00:50.931 --> 00:00:52.979 "Where should we explore?" NOTE Paragraph 00:00:52.979 --> 00:00:55.110 I think there's a sense that many of us have 00:00:55.110 --> 00:00:57.929 that the great age of exploration on Earth is over, 00:00:57.929 --> 00:00:59.461 that for the next generation 00:00:59.461 --> 00:01:02.879 they're going to have to go to outer space or the deepest oceans 00:01:02.879 --> 00:01:05.429 in order to find something significant to explore. 00:01:05.429 --> 00:01:07.929 But is that really the case? 00:01:07.929 --> 00:01:10.925 Is there really nowhere significant for us to explore 00:01:10.925 --> 00:01:12.650 left here on Earth? NOTE Paragraph 00:01:12.650 --> 00:01:13.833 It sort of made me think back 00:01:13.833 --> 00:01:16.583 to one of my favorite explorers in the history of biology. 00:01:16.583 --> 00:01:19.917 This is an explorer of the unseen world, Martinus Beijerinck. 00:01:19.917 --> 00:01:22.375 So Beijerinck set out to discover the cause 00:01:22.375 --> 00:01:24.740 of tobacco mosaic disease. 00:01:24.740 --> 00:01:28.292 What he did is he took the infected juice from tobacco plants 00:01:28.292 --> 00:01:31.229 and he would filter it through smaller and smaller filters. 00:01:31.229 --> 00:01:32.795 And he reached the point 00:01:32.795 --> 00:01:35.806 where he felt that there must be something out there 00:01:35.806 --> 00:01:39.250 that was smaller than the smallest forms of life that were ever known -- 00:01:39.250 --> 00:01:41.294 bacteria, at the time. 00:01:41.294 --> 00:01:44.682 He came up with a name for his mystery agent. 00:01:44.682 --> 00:01:46.708 He called it the virus -- 00:01:46.708 --> 00:01:48.983 Latin for "poison." 00:01:48.983 --> 00:01:51.760 And in uncovering viruses, 00:01:51.760 --> 00:01:55.381 Beijerinck really opened this entirely new world for us. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:55.381 --> 00:01:57.375 We now know that viruses make up the majority 00:01:57.375 --> 00:01:59.667 of the genetic information on our planet, 00:01:59.667 --> 00:02:01.333 more than the genetic information 00:02:01.333 --> 00:02:03.083 of all other forms of life combined. 00:02:03.083 --> 00:02:06.177 And obviously there's been tremendous practical applications 00:02:06.177 --> 00:02:07.431 associated with this world -- 00:02:07.431 --> 00:02:09.833 things like the eradication of smallpox, 00:02:09.833 --> 00:02:13.488 the advent of a vaccine against cervical cancer, 00:02:13.488 --> 00:02:17.087 which we now know is mostly caused by human papillomavirus. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:17.087 --> 00:02:18.760 And Beijerinck's discovery, 00:02:18.760 --> 00:02:21.481 this was not something that occurred 500 years ago. 00:02:21.481 --> 00:02:24.160 It was a little over 100 years ago 00:02:24.160 --> 00:02:26.580 that Beijerinck discovered viruses. 00:02:26.580 --> 00:02:28.467 So basically we had automobiles, 00:02:28.467 --> 00:02:30.710 but we were unaware of the forms of life 00:02:30.710 --> 00:02:33.716 that make up most of the genetic information on our planet. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:33.716 --> 00:02:35.898 We now have these amazing tools 00:02:35.898 --> 00:02:38.208 to allow us to explore the unseen world -- 00:02:38.208 --> 00:02:40.221 things like deep sequencing, 00:02:40.221 --> 00:02:43.785 which allow us to do much more than just skim the surface 00:02:43.785 --> 00:02:46.875 and look at individual genomes from a particular species, 00:02:46.875 --> 00:02:49.370 but to look at entire metagenomes, 00:02:49.370 --> 00:02:53.550 the communities of teeming microorganisms in, on and around us 00:02:53.550 --> 00:02:57.071 and to document all of the genetic information in these species. 00:02:57.071 --> 00:02:58.542 We can apply these techniques 00:02:58.542 --> 00:03:03.052 to things from soil to skin and everything in between. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:03.052 --> 00:03:06.042 In my organization we now do this on a regular basis 00:03:06.042 --> 00:03:08.421 to identify the causes of outbreaks 00:03:08.421 --> 00:03:11.710 that are unclear exactly what causes them. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:11.710 --> 00:03:14.042 And just to give you a sense of how this works, 00:03:14.042 --> 00:03:17.042 imagine that we took a nasal swab from every single one of you. 00:03:17.042 --> 00:03:18.404 And this is something we commonly do 00:03:18.404 --> 00:03:21.398 to look for respiratory viruses like influenza. 00:03:21.398 --> 00:03:23.250 The first thing we would see 00:03:23.250 --> 00:03:26.300 is a tremendous amount of genetic information. 00:03:26.300 --> 00:03:28.708 And if we started looking into that genetic information, 00:03:28.708 --> 00:03:31.043 we'd see a number of usual suspects out there -- 00:03:31.043 --> 00:03:32.836 of course, a lot of human genetic information, 00:03:32.836 --> 00:03:35.708 but also bacterial and viral information, 00:03:35.708 --> 00:03:38.875 mostly from things that are completely harmless within your nose. 00:03:38.875 --> 00:03:41.787 But we'd also see something very, very surprising. 00:03:41.787 --> 00:03:43.862 As we started to look at this information, 00:03:43.862 --> 00:03:48.208 we would see that about 20 percent of the genetic information in your nose 00:03:48.208 --> 00:03:51.125 doesn't match anything that we've ever seen before -- 00:03:51.125 --> 00:03:54.296 no plant, animal, fungus, virus or bacteria. 00:03:54.296 --> 00:03:57.800 Basically we have no clue what this is. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:57.800 --> 00:04:01.920 And for the small group of us who actually study this kind of data, 00:04:01.920 --> 00:04:05.635 a few of us have actually begun to call this information 00:04:05.635 --> 00:04:08.037 biological dark matter. 00:04:08.037 --> 00:04:10.985 We know it's not anything that we've seen before; 00:04:10.985 --> 00:04:14.092 it's sort of the equivalent of an uncharted continent 00:04:14.092 --> 00:04:16.810 right within our own genetic information. 00:04:16.810 --> 00:04:18.187 And there's a lot of it. 00:04:18.187 --> 00:04:21.673 If you think 20 percent of genetic information in your nose is a lot 00:04:21.673 --> 00:04:23.292 of biological dark matter, 00:04:23.292 --> 00:04:25.042 if we looked at your gut, 00:04:25.042 --> 00:04:28.738 up to 40 or 50 percent of that information is biological dark matter. 00:04:28.738 --> 00:04:30.977 And even in the relatively sterile blood, 00:04:30.977 --> 00:04:33.958 around one to two percent of this information is dark matter -- 00:04:33.958 --> 00:04:38.706 can't be classified, can't be typed or matched with anything we've seen before. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:38.706 --> 00:04:41.333 At first we thought that perhaps this was artifact. 00:04:41.333 --> 00:04:44.585 These deep sequencing tools are relatively new. 00:04:44.585 --> 00:04:46.658 But as they become more and more accurate, 00:04:46.658 --> 00:04:50.246 we've determined that this information is a form of life, 00:04:50.246 --> 00:04:52.833 or at least some of it is a form of life. 00:04:52.833 --> 00:04:57.198 And while the hypotheses for explaining the existence of biological dark matter 00:04:57.198 --> 00:04:59.136 are really only in their infancy, 00:04:59.136 --> 00:05:02.813 there's a very, very exciting possibility that exists: 00:05:02.813 --> 00:05:06.292 that buried in this life, in this genetic information, 00:05:06.292 --> 00:05:10.780 are signatures of as of yet unidentified life. 00:05:10.780 --> 00:05:14.715 That as we explore these strings of A's, T's, C's and G's, 00:05:14.715 --> 00:05:18.050 we may uncover a completely new class of life 00:05:18.050 --> 00:05:20.462 that, like Beijerinck, will fundamentally change 00:05:20.462 --> 00:05:22.658 the way that we think about the nature of biology. 00:05:22.658 --> 00:05:27.087 That perhaps will allow us to identify the cause of a cancer that afflicts us 00:05:27.087 --> 00:05:30.619 or identify the source of an outbreak that we aren't familiar with 00:05:30.619 --> 00:05:33.513 or perhaps create a new tool in molecular biology. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:33.513 --> 00:05:35.198 I'm pleased to announce that, 00:05:35.198 --> 00:05:40.140 along with colleagues at Stanford and Caltech and UCSF, 00:05:40.140 --> 00:05:41.779 we're currently starting an initiative 00:05:41.779 --> 00:05:45.752 to explore biological dark matter for the existence of new forms of life. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:45.752 --> 00:05:47.896 A little over a hundred years ago, 00:05:47.896 --> 00:05:50.600 people were unaware of viruses, 00:05:50.600 --> 00:05:54.839 the forms of life that make up most of the genetic information on our planet. 00:05:54.839 --> 00:05:57.421 A hundred years from now, people may marvel 00:05:57.421 --> 00:06:00.875 that we were perhaps completely unaware of a new class of life 00:06:00.875 --> 00:06:04.179 that literally was right under our noses. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:04.179 --> 00:06:07.502 It's true, we may have charted all the continents on the planet 00:06:07.502 --> 00:06:10.583 and we may have discovered all the mammals that are out there, 00:06:10.583 --> 00:06:14.139 but that doesn't mean that there's nothing left to explore on Earth. 00:06:14.139 --> 00:06:16.144 Beijerinck and his kind 00:06:16.144 --> 00:06:19.831 provide an important lesson for the next generation of explorers -- 00:06:19.831 --> 00:06:23.163 people like that young girl from Beloit, Wisconsin. 00:06:23.163 --> 00:06:26.958 And I think if we phrase that lesson, it's something like this: 00:06:26.958 --> 00:06:31.187 Don't assume that what we currently think is out there is the full story. 00:06:31.187 --> 00:06:36.250 Go after the dark matter in whatever field you choose to explore. 00:06:36.250 --> 00:06:38.369 There are unknowns all around us 00:06:38.369 --> 00:06:40.750 and they're just waiting to be discovered. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:40.750 --> 00:06:42.419 Thank you. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:42.419 --> 00:06:47.367 (Applause)