DNA: The book of you - Joe Hanson

627,700 views ・ 2012-11-26

TED-Ed


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

00:00
Transcriber: Andrea McDonough Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
0
0
7000
00:13
Every human being starts out the same way:
1
13801
2251
00:16
two cells, one from each parent,
2
16076
1726
00:17
found each other and became one.
3
17826
1793
00:19
And that one cell reproduced itself,
4
19643
1752
00:21
dividing, dividing and dividing
5
21419
2498
00:23
until there were 10 trillion of them.
6
23941
2113
00:26
Do you realize there's more cells in one person's body
7
26444
2555
00:29
than there are stars in the Milky Way?
8
29023
2012
00:32
But those 10 trillion cells aren't just sitting there in a big pile.
9
32106
3238
00:35
That would make for a pretty boring human being!
10
35368
2784
00:38
So what is it that says a nose is a nose,
11
38176
2071
00:40
and toes is toes?
12
40271
1253
00:41
What is it that says this is bone
13
41548
1717
00:43
and this is brain
14
43289
1329
00:44
and this is heart
15
44642
1151
00:45
and this is that little thing in the back of your throat
16
45817
2626
00:48
you can never remember the name of?
17
48467
1690
00:50
Everything you are or ever will be made of
18
50181
2008
00:52
starts as a tiny book of instructions
19
52213
1778
00:54
found in each and every cell.
20
54015
1404
00:55
Every time your body wants to make something,
21
55443
2106
00:57
it goes back to the instruction book,
22
57573
1777
00:59
looks it up and puts it together.
23
59374
1620
01:01
So how does one cell hold all that information?
24
61494
2622
01:04
Let's get small.
25
64140
1151
01:05
I mean, really small -- smaller than the tip of a sewing needle.
26
65315
3068
01:08
Then we can take a journey inside a single cell
27
68407
2227
01:10
to find out what makes up the book of you,
28
70658
2400
01:13
your genome.
29
73082
1512
01:14
The first thing we see is that the whole genome, all your DNA,
30
74618
2930
01:17
is contained inside its own tiny compartment,
31
77572
2122
01:19
called the nucleus.
32
79718
1151
01:20
If we stretched out all the DNA in this one cell into a single thread,
33
80893
3305
01:24
it would be over 3 feet long!
34
84222
1539
01:26
We have to make it fit in a tiny compartment
35
86190
2080
01:28
that's a million times smaller.
36
88294
1816
01:30
We could just bunch it up like Christmas lights,
37
90134
2294
01:32
but that could get messy.
38
92452
1274
01:34
We need some organization.
39
94173
1494
01:35
First, the long thread of DNA wraps around proteins
40
95691
2514
01:38
clustered into little beads called nucleosomes,
41
98229
2454
01:40
which end up looking like a long, beaded necklace.
42
100707
2575
01:43
And that necklace is wrapped up in its own spiral,
43
103718
2400
01:46
like an old telephone cord.
44
106142
1294
01:47
And those spirals get layered on top of one another
45
107460
2405
01:49
until we get a neat little shape that fits inside the nucleus.
46
109889
2967
01:52
Voilà! Three feet of DNA squeezed into a tiny compartment.
47
112880
3038
01:56
If only we could hire DNA to pack our suitcases!
48
116396
2474
01:59
Each tiny mass of DNA is called a chromosome.
49
119822
3152
02:02
The book of you would have 46 chapters,
50
122998
2113
02:05
one for each chromosome.
51
125135
1386
02:07
Twenty-three chapters of your book came from your mom,
52
127021
2588
02:09
and 23 chapters came from your dad.
53
129633
1976
02:11
Two of those chapters, called "X" and "Y,"
54
131633
2090
02:13
determine if you're male, "XY,"
55
133747
1487
02:15
or female, "XX."
56
135258
1276
02:17
Put them together, and we get
57
137058
1389
02:18
two almost identical but slightly different sets of 23 chapters.
58
138471
3468
02:21
The tiny variations are what makes each person different.
59
141963
2809
02:25
It's estimated that all the chapters together
60
145200
2132
02:27
hold about 20,000 individual instructions, called genes.
61
147356
3296
02:30
Written out, all those 20,000 instructions
62
150676
2001
02:32
are 30 million letters long!
63
152701
2280
02:35
If someone were writing one letter per second,
64
155005
2162
02:37
it would take them almost an entire year to write it once.
65
157191
2849
02:40
It turns out that our genome book is much, much longer
66
160064
2939
02:43
than just those 30 million letters --
67
163027
1825
02:44
almost 100 times longer!
68
164876
1829
02:47
What are all those extra pages for?
69
167306
1668
02:48
Well, each page of instructions has a few pages of nonsense inserted
70
168998
3235
02:52
that have to be taken out before we end up with something useful.
71
172257
3063
02:55
The parts we throw out, we call introns.
72
175344
2358
02:57
The instructions we keep, we call exons.
73
177726
2316
03:00
We can also have hundreds of pages in between each gene.
74
180066
3027
03:03
Some of these excess pages were inserted
75
183117
1921
03:05
by nasty little infections in our ancestors,
76
185062
2103
03:07
but some of them are actually helpful.
77
187189
1849
03:09
They protect the ends of each chapter from being damaged,
78
189619
2694
03:12
or some help our cells find a particular thing they're looking for,
79
192337
3154
03:15
or give a cell a signal to stop making something.
80
195515
2466
03:18
All in all, for every page of instructions,
81
198663
2211
03:20
there's almost 100 pages of filler.
82
200898
1965
03:23
In the end, each of our books' 46 chapters
83
203728
2297
03:26
is between 48 and 250 million letters long.
84
206049
3468
03:30
That's 3.2 billion letters total!
85
210604
2807
03:34
To type all that copy,
86
214022
1159
03:35
you'd be at it for over 100 years,
87
215205
1832
03:37
and the book would be over 600,000 pages long.
88
217061
2945
03:40
Every type of cell carries the same book,
89
220831
1965
03:42
but each has a set of bookmarks
90
222820
1508
03:44
that tell it exactly which pages it needs to look up.
91
224352
3095
03:47
So a bone cell reads only the set of instructions it needs to become bone.
92
227471
3583
03:51
Your brain cells,
93
231078
1202
03:52
they read the set that tells them how to become brain.
94
232304
2546
03:54
If some cells suddenly decide to start reading other instructions,
95
234874
3175
03:58
they can actually change from one type to another.
96
238073
2898
04:00
So every little cell in your body is holding on to an amazing book,
97
240995
3249
04:04
full of the instructions for life.
98
244268
2260
04:06
Your nose reads nose pages,
99
246552
1624
04:08
your toes read toes pages.
100
248200
1974
04:10
And that little thing in the back of your throat?
101
250198
2301
04:12
It's got its own pages, too.
102
252523
1515
04:14
They're under "uvula."
103
254062
1150

Original video on YouTube.com
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