Why is it so hard to cure the common cold?

950,265 views ・ 2022-10-20

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
In 2000, a company called ViroPharma ran clinical trials of pleconaril,
0
6961
4421
00:11
a new pill designed to treat the common cold.
1
11382
2503
00:13
In many patients, the pill helped.
2
13968
1794
00:15
But in 7 of them, just a few days into the treatment,
3
15845
2794
00:18
researchers found mutated virus variants that were almost completely resistant
4
18765
4296
00:23
to pleconaril.
5
23061
1042
00:24
Viruses are always mutating, but this one mutated so quickly that it managed
6
24395
3879
00:28
to outmaneuver years of research and development in just a few days.
7
28274
4213
00:33
If you didn't have an immune system and caught a cold,
8
33237
2545
00:35
the infection would quickly spread deep into your lungs.
9
35782
3003
00:38
Rampant viral replication would destroy tissue there,
10
38785
3003
00:41
until your lungs couldn’t supply your body with enough oxygen
11
41788
3086
00:44
and you’d asphyxiate.
12
44874
1460
00:46
Unfortunately, for millions of people around the world who live
13
46459
2961
00:49
with a less-than-fully-functional immune system
14
49420
2336
00:51
or who are on immunosuppressant drugs,
15
51756
2085
00:53
this is a real risk:
16
53841
1460
00:55
“minor” infections can turn serious or even deadly.
17
55426
4505
01:00
But if you're fortunate enough to have a fully functional immune system,
18
60014
3420
01:03
a cold will probably give you a few relatively mild symptoms.
19
63434
3087
01:07
On average, adults catch more than 150 colds throughout their lives.
20
67146
3587
01:10
And despite the fact that the symptoms are similar,
21
70817
2460
01:13
the cause could be different each time.
22
73277
2837
01:16
Common colds are caused by at least 8 different families of virus,
23
76614
4213
01:20
each of which can have its own species and subtypes.
24
80952
2878
01:24
How can so many different viruses cause the same illness?
25
84413
3170
01:27
Well, viruses can only invade our bodies in a few ways:
26
87834
3169
01:31
one is to come in on a breath.
27
91087
1835
01:32
We have to breathe, so our immune system sets up a bunch of frontline defenses
28
92922
4296
01:37
and these are actually what produce many of the symptoms of a cold.
29
97218
3795
01:41
Your mucus-y, dripping nose is your immune system trapping and flushing out virus.
30
101514
4504
01:46
Your fever is your immune system raising your body temperature
31
106018
3129
01:49
to slow down viral replication.
32
109147
2002
01:51
And your inflamed, well, everything,
33
111149
2585
01:53
that’s your immune system widening your blood vessels
34
113734
2503
01:56
and recruiting its white blood cell army to help kill the virus.
35
116237
3712
02:00
So, if the common cold is caused by many different viruses,
36
120283
3420
02:03
is a cure even possible?
37
123911
1752
02:06
Here’s one fact in our favor:
38
126122
1585
02:07
a single family of viruses causes 30 to 50% of all colds:
39
127790
4671
02:12
rhinovirus.
40
132545
1126
02:13
If we could eliminate all rhinovirus infections,
41
133754
2628
02:16
we’d be a long way towards curing the common cold.
42
136382
2586
02:19
There are two main ways to fight a virus: vaccines and antiviral drugs.
43
139468
4463
02:24
The first attempt to create a rhinovirus vaccine was a success—
44
144390
4004
02:28
but a short-lived one.
45
148394
1251
02:29
In 1957, William Price vaccinated 50 kids with inactivated rhinovirus
46
149729
5130
02:34
and gave 50 others a placebo.
47
154859
2127
02:37
Soon afterwards, a rhinovirus outbreak spread throughout the kids.
48
157069
3254
02:40
In the vaccinated group, only 3 got sick.
49
160323
2794
02:43
In the placebo group, 23 did— almost 8 times as many.
50
163242
4171
02:47
And despite the small numbers, this was promising:
51
167538
2753
02:50
the immune systems of vaccinated kids were successfully
52
170291
2711
02:53
recognizing and responding to rhinovirus.
53
173002
2544
02:55
But later trials of the vaccine showed no protection at all— none.
54
175671
4129
02:59
This wasn’t Price’s fault—
55
179884
1543
03:01
no one at the time knew that rhinovirus had multiple subtypes.
56
181427
3504
03:06
Price’s vaccine, for reasons we don’t fully understand,
57
186057
2961
03:09
didn't provide broad protection,
58
189018
2169
03:11
meaning it was only effective against one or maybe a few subtypes of rhinovirus—
59
191187
4713
03:15
out of 169 subtypes and counting.
60
195900
3170
03:19
Sometimes, when we make a vaccine, we get lucky.
61
199779
2669
03:22
The mRNA COVID vaccines, for example,
62
202448
1877
03:24
effectively protect us against severe disease and death
63
204325
3378
03:27
across the original virus and variants too.
64
207703
2753
03:30
But we have yet to create a broadly protective vaccine against rhinovirus,
65
210706
3963
03:34
or any other virus that causes the common cold.
66
214669
2961
03:38
Okay, what about antiviral drugs?
67
218172
2002
03:40
Viruses hijack human cellular machinery to replicate and spread,
68
220258
4212
03:44
so it’s hard to make a molecule that’s toxic to the virus
69
224637
3086
03:47
without also being toxic to the human.
70
227723
2378
03:50
And even if you manage to do that,
71
230309
1710
03:52
the virus could mutate out of reach of the drug.
72
232019
2753
03:55
Viruses are slippery beasts.
73
235439
1752
03:57
We have, though, had some incredible successes:
74
237316
2419
03:59
we eradicated smallpox thanks to an effective vaccine,
75
239735
3420
04:03
the fact that it can’t hide out in other species,
76
243155
2336
04:05
and its relatively low mutation rate.
77
245491
2085
04:07
HIV, on the other hand, mutates so quickly that in an untreated individual,
78
247743
4463
04:12
every possible single-letter mutation in the virus’s genetic code
79
252206
3879
04:16
could, in theory, be produced in a single day.
80
256085
2878
04:19
Despite trying for decades, we still don’t have a vaccine.
81
259088
3462
04:22
But we do have an effective cocktail of HIV drugs
82
262550
2919
04:25
that the virus can’t easily mutate away from.
83
265469
2419
04:28
Unfortunately, we are stuck with colds for now.
84
268306
2544
04:30
But the last few decades have featured some entirely game-changing
85
270850
3128
04:33
medical breakthroughs, like mRNA vaccines and CRISPR.
86
273978
2919
04:37
CRISPR could be particularly promising as an antiviral agent,
87
277189
3295
04:40
because it originally evolved in bacteria as an immune defense against viruses.
88
280484
4797
04:45
In fact, early in the COVID-19 pandemic,
89
285448
2335
04:47
a research team showed that a CRISPR system could degrade
90
287783
2795
04:50
coronavirus and influenza genomes in our lung cells.
91
290578
3086
04:53
They called their system prophylactic antiviral CRISPR in human cells.
92
293831
4463
04:58
Or, for short, PAC-MAN.
93
298419
2044
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7