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Animations of unseeable biology | Drew Berry | TEDxSydney

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    What I'm going to show you
    are the astonishing molecular machines
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    that create the living
    fabric of your body.
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    Now molecules are really, really tiny.
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    And by tiny, I mean really.
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    They're smaller
    than a wavelength of light,
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    so we have no way
    to directly observe them.
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    But through science,
    we do have a fairly good idea
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    of what's going on
    down at the molecular scale.
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    So what we can do is actually
    tell you about the molecules,
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    but we don't really have a direct way
    of showing you the molecules.
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    One way around this is to draw pictures.
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    And this idea is actually nothing new.
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    Scientists have always created pictures
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    as part of their thinking
    and discovery process.
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    They draw pictures
    of what they're observing with their eyes,
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    through technology
    like telescopes and microscopes,
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    and also what they're thinking
    about in their minds.
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    I picked two well-known examples,
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    because they're very well-known
    for expressing science through art.
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    And I start with Galileo,
    who used the world's first telescope
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    to look at the Moon.
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    And he transformed
    our understanding of the Moon.
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    The perception in the 17th century
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    was the Moon was a perfect
    heavenly sphere.
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    But what Galileo saw
    was a rocky, barren world,
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    which he expressed
    through his watercolor painting.
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    Another scientist with very big ideas,
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    the superstar of biology
    is Charles Darwin.
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    And with this famous entry
    in his notebook,
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    he begins in the top left-hand
    corner with, "I think,"
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    and then sketches out
    the first tree of life,
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    which is his perception
    of how all the species,
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    all living things on Earth are connected
    through evolutionary history --
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    the origin of species
    through natural selection
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    and divergence
    from an ancestral population.
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    Even as a scientist,
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    I used to go to lectures
    by molecular biologists
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    and find them completely incomprehensible,
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    with all the fancy technical
    language and jargon
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    that they would use
    in describing their work,
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    until I encountered
    the artworks of David Goodsell,
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    who is a molecular biologist
    at the Scripps Institute.
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    And his pictures -- everything's accurate
    and it's all to scale.
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    And his work illuminated for me
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    what the molecular world
    inside us is like.
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    In the top left-hand corner,
    you've got this yellow-green area.
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    This is a transection through blood.
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    The yellow-green area is the fluid
    of blood, which is mostly water,
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    but it's also antibodies, sugars,
    hormones, that kind of thing.
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    And the red region is a slice
    into a red blood cell.
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    And those red molecules are hemoglobin.
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    They are actually red;
    that's what gives blood its color.
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    And hemoglobin acts as a molecular sponge
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    to soak up the oxygen in your lungs
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    and then carry it
    to other parts of the body.
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    I was very much inspired
    by this image many years ago,
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    and I wondered whether
    we could use computer graphics
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    to represent the molecular world.
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    What would it look like?
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    And that's how I really began.
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    So let's begin.
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    This is DNA in its classic
    double helix form.
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    And it's from X-ray crystallography,
    so it's an accurate model of DNA.
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    If we unwind the double helix
    and unzip the two strands,
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    you see these things that look like teeth.
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    Those are the letters of genetic code,
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    the 25,000 genes
    you've got written in your DNA.
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    This is what they typically talk about --
    the genetic code --
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    this is what they're talking about.
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    But I want to talk about
    a different aspect of DNA science,
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    and that is the physical nature of DNA.
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    It's these two strands
    that run in opposite directions
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    for reasons I can't go into right now.
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    But they physically run
    in opposite directions,
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    which creates a number of complications
    for your living cells,
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    as you're about to see,
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    most particularly
    when DNA is being copied.
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    And so what I'm about to show you
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    is an accurate representation
    of the actual DNA replication machine
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    that's occurring right now
    inside your body,
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    at least 2002 biology.
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    So DNA's entering the production line
    from the left-hand side,
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    and it hits this collection,
    these miniature biochemical machines,
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    that are pulling apart the DNA strand
    and making an exact copy.
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    So DNA comes in and hits this blue,
    doughnut-shaped structure
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    and it's ripped apart
    into its two strands.
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    One strand can be copied directly,
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    and you can see these things
    spooling off to the bottom there.
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    But things aren't so simple
    for the other strand
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    because it must be copied backwards.
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    So it's thrown out
    repeatedly in these loops
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    and copied one section at a time,
    creating two new DNA molecules.
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    Now you have billions of this machine
    right now working away inside you,
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    copying your DNA with exquisite fidelity.
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    It's an accurate representation,
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    and it's pretty much at the correct speed
    for what is occurring inside you.
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    I've left out error correction
    and a bunch of other things.
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    (Laughter)
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    This was work from a number of years ago--
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    This is work from a number of years ago,
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    but what I'll show you next
    is updated science,
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    it's updated technology.
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    So again, we begin with DNA.
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    And it's jiggling and wiggling there
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    because of the surrounding
    soup of molecules,
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    which I've stripped away
    so you can see something.
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    DNA is about two nanometers across,
    which is really quite tiny.
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    But in each one of your cells,
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    each strand of DNA is about
    30 to 40 million nanometers long.
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    So to keep the DNA organized
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    and regulate access to the genetic code,
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    it's wrapped around these
    purple proteins --
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    or I've labeled them purple here.
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    It's packaged up and bundled up.
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    All this field of view
    is a single strand of DNA.
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    This huge package of DNA
    is called a chromosome.
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    And we'll come back
    to chromosomes in a minute.
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    We're pulling out, we're zooming out,
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    out through a nuclear pore,
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    which is the gateway to this compartment
    that holds all the DNA,
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    called the nucleus.
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    All of this field of view
    is about a semester's worth of biology,
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    and I've got seven minutes,
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    So we're not going to be
    able to do that today?
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    No, I'm being told, "No."
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    This is the way a living cell
    looks down a light microscope.
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    And it's been filmed under time-lapse,
    which is why you can see it moving.
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    The nuclear envelope breaks down.
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    These sausage-shaped things
    are the chromosomes,
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    and we'll focus on them.
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    They go through this very striking motion
    that is focused on these little red spots.
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    When the cell feels it's ready to go,
    it rips apart the chromosome.
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    One set of DNA goes to one side,
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    the other side gets
    the other set of DNA --
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    identical copies of DNA.
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    And then the cell splits down the middle.
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    And again, you have billions of cells
    undergoing this process
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    right now inside of you.
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    Now we're going to rewind
    and just focus on the chromosomes,
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    and look at its structure and describe it.
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    So again, here we are
    at that equator moment.
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    The chromosomes line up.
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    And if we isolate just one chromosome,
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    we're going to pull it out
    and have a look at its structure.
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    So this is one of the biggest
    molecular structures that you have,
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    at least as far as we've discovered
    so far inside of us.
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    So this is a single chromosome.
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    And you have two strands of DNA
    in each chromosome.
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    One is bundled up into one sausage.
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    The other strand is bundled up
    into the other sausage.
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    These things that look like whiskers
    that are sticking out from either side
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    are the dynamic scaffolding of the cell.
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    They're called microtubules,
    that name's not important.
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    But we're going to focus on
    the region labeled red here --
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    and it's the interface between
    the dynamic scaffolding
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    and the chromosomes.
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    It is obviously central
    to the movement of the chromosomes.
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    We have no idea, really,
    as to how it's achieving that movement.
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    We've been studying this thing
    they call the kinetochore
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    for over a hundred years
    with intense study,
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    and we're still just beginning
    to discover what it's about.
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    It is made up of about
    200 different types of proteins,
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    thousands of proteins in total.
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    It is a signal broadcasting system.
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    It broadcasts through chemical signals,
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    telling the rest of the cell
    when it's ready,
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    when it feels that everything
    is aligned and ready to go
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    for the separation of the chromosomes.
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    It is able to couple onto the growing
    and shrinking microtubules.
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    It's involved with the growing
    of the microtubules,
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    and it's able to transiently
    couple onto them.
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    It's also an attention-sensing system.
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    It's able to feel when the cell is ready,
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    when the chromosome
    is correctly positioned.
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    It's turning green here because it feels
    that everything is just right.
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    And you'll see,
    there's this one little last bit
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    that's still remaining red.
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    And it's walked away
    down the microtubules.
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    That is the signal broadcasting system
    sending out the stop signal.
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    And it's walked away --
    I mean, it's that mechanical.
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    It's molecular clockwork.
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    This is how you work
    at the molecular scale.
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    So with a little bit
    of molecular eye candy,
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    (Laughter)
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    we've got kinesins, the orange ones.
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    They're little molecular courier
    molecules walking one way.
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    And here are the dynein,
    they're carrying that broadcasting system.
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    And they've got their long legs
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    so they can step around
    obstacles and so on.
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    So again, this is all derived
    accurately from the science.
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    The problem is we can't show it
    to you any other way.
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    Exploring at the frontier of science,
    at the frontier of human understanding,
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    is mind-blowing.
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    Discovering this stuff
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    is certainly a pleasurable
    incentive to work in science.
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    But most medical researchers --
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    discovering the stuff is simply steps
    along the path to the big goals,
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    which are to eradicate disease,
    to eliminate the suffering
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    and the misery that disease causes
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    and to lift people out of poverty.
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    And so with my remaining time,
    my four minutes,
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    I'm going to introduce you
    to one of the most devastating
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    and economically important diseases.
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    Which inflicts hundreds of millions
    of people worldwide every year.
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    So again - sound, thank you.
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    This parasite is an ancient organism.
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    It has been with us
    since before we were human.
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    Famous victims include
    Alexander the Great,
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    Ghengis Khan
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    and George Washington.
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    This is the neck of a sleeping child
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    just after the Sun has set.
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    And it's feeding time for mosquitoes.
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    It's dinner time.
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    [The lifecycle of Malaria
    Human Host]
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    (Sound of mosquito buzzing)
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    This mosquito is infected
    with a malaria parasite.
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    Now, mosquitoes are usually vegetarian,
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    they drink honey dew nectar,
    fruit juices, that kind of thing.
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    Only a pregnant female will bite humans
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    seeking nutrients from blood
    to nourish her developing eggs.
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    During the bite she injects saliva
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    to stop the blood from clotting
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    and to lubricate the wound.
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    Because she is infected with malaria,
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    her saliva also contains
    the malaria parasite
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    so it rides in during the bite.
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    The parasite then exits the wound
    and seeks out a blood vessel
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    and uses the circulatory system
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    as a massive freeway
    heading for its first target -
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    the core of your body's
    blood filter system - the liver.
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    Within two minutes of the bite,
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    the malaria parasites arrive to liver.
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    And sensing its arrival then looks
    for an exit from the blood stream.
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    And this is where malaria
    is particularly devious
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    because it uses
    the very type of immune cell
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    that is the resident in the blood stream.
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    The immune system is supposed
    to remove foreign invaders
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    like bacteria and parasites.
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    But somehow, we're not quite sure how,
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    malaria uses a backdoor entry
    into the liver tissue.
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    So here's that immune cell.
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    Malaria leaves the bloodstream
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    and infects a liver cell
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    killing one or more liver cells
    on its way.
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    So again, this is within
    a couple of minutes
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    of the mosquito bite.
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    Once it's infected a liver cell,
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    it takes the next five or six days.
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    It incubates,
    it copies its DNA over and over again
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    creating thousands of new parasites.
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    So, it's this delay of about a week
    since you've had the mosquito bite
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    before malaria symptoms start to appear.
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    The malaria also transforms
    its physical nature;
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    it's heading for a new target.
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    The next target is your red blood cells.
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    Part of its transformation,
    the malaria coates itself
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    with a coating of molecular hairs
    that act like velcro.
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    To stick red blood cells
    to the outer surface.
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    And then they reorient themselves
    and penetrate inside the red blood cell.
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    This happens within 30 seconds
    of leaving the liver.
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    This is an aera of intense study -
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    if we could stop this process
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    we could create a vaccine for malaria.
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    Once it's inside the red blood cell
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    it can hide
    from your body's immune system.
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    It then, over the next few days,
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    devours the contents of the infected cell
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    and creates more parasites.
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    It also changes the nature
    of the red blood cell
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    and makes it sticky
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    so it sticks on the blood vessel walls.
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    This gives the parasite enough time
    to incubate and grow.
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    Once it's ready,
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    it then bursts out of the red blood cell
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    spreading malaria
    throughout the bloodstream.
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    Malaria victims suffer fever,
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    lots of blood, convulsions,
    brain damage and coma.
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    Countless millions have been killed by it.
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    This year between
    200 and 300 million people
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    will be struct down with malaria.
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    Most people who die from the disease
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    are pregnant women
    and children under the age of five.
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    Thank you.
  • 14:11 - 14:16
    (Applause)
Title:
Animations of unseeable biology | Drew Berry | TEDxSydney
Description:

Drew Berry is a biomedical animator whose scientifically accurate and aesthetically rich visualisations reveal the microscopic world inside our bodies to a wide range of audiences.

His animations have exhibited at venues such as the Guggenheim Museum, Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Royal Institute of Great Britain and the University of Geneva. In 2010 he received a MacArthur Fellowship "Genius Award".

http://tedxsydney.com/site/newSpeakers.cfm#DrewBerry

-------------------
TEDxSydney 2011 took place on Saturday 28 May 2011 at CarriageWorks. Tens of thousands of people enjoyed the day: 800 in the theatre, over 1,000 via big screen simulcast in The Forum, up to 48,000 online via YouTube ... and up to 80,000 tuning in to ABC Radio National. It was a grand day. About TEDx, x = independently organised event In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organised events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organised events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organised TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organised.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
14:27

English subtitles

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