How we're using dogs to sniff out malaria | James Logan

52,100 views ・ 2019-11-08

TED


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

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Malaria is still one of the biggest killers on the planet.
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Despite us making significant progress in the last 20 years,
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half the world's population is still at risk from this disease.
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In fact, every two minutes,
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a child under the age of two dies from malaria.
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Our progress has undoubtedly stalled.
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Now we face many challenges when it comes to tackling malaria,
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but one of the problems that we have
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is actually finding people who are infected with malaria in the first place.
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So, for example, if people have some level of immunity to the disease,
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then they can develop an infection and become infectious and still pass it on
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but not actually develop any symptoms,
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and that can be a big problem, because how do you find those people?
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It's like looking for a needle in a haystack.
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Now scientists have been trying to solve this problem for some years,
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but what I want to talk to you about today
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is that the solution to this problem may have been right under our noses
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this whole time.
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Now that was a bit of a heavy start, with lots of really important statistics,
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so I want us all to just relax a little bit
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and that'll help me to relax a little bit as well.
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So why don't we just all take a nice deep breath in ...
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Wow. (Laughs)
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And sigh,
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and, whoo, going to get blown away there.
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OK, now I want you to do it again,
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but this time, I want you to do it just through your nose,
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and I want you to really sense the environment around you.
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And in fact, I want you to really smell the person who's sitting next to you.
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Even if you don't know them, I don't care.
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Lean in, get your nose right into their armpit,
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come on, stop being so British about it,
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get your nose into the armpit, have a good old sniff,
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see what you can smell.
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(Laughter)
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Now each and every one of us
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would have had a very different sensory experience there.
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Some of us would have smelled something rather pleasant,
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perhaps somebody's perfume.
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But some of us might have smelled something a little bit less pleasant,
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perhaps somebody's bad breath or body odor.
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Maybe you even smelled your own body odor.
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(Laughter)
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But, you know, there's probably a good reason
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that some of us don't like certain body smells.
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Throughout history,
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there have been many examples of diseases being associated with a smell.
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So, for example, typhoid apparently smells like baked brown bread,
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and that's quite a nice smell, isn't it,
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but it starts to get a little bit worse.
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TB smells like stale beer,
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and yellow fever smells like the inside of a butcher shop, like raw meat.
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And in fact, when you look at the sort of words that are used
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to describe diseases,
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you tend to find these words:
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"rotting," "foul," "putrid" or "pungent."
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So it's no surprise, then,
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that smell and body odor gets a bit of bad reputation.
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If I was to say to you, "You smell,"
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now, you're going to take that not exactly as a compliment, are you.
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But you do smell.
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You've just found that out. You do smell.
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It's a scientific fact.
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And I'd quite like to turn that on its head.
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What if we could actually think about smell in a positive way,
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put it to good use?
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What if we could detect the chemicals
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that are given off by our bodies when we're ill,
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and use that to diagnose people?
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Now we'd need to develop good sensors that would allow us to do this,
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but it turns out that the world's best sensors actually already exist,
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and they're called animals.
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Now animals are built to smell.
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They live their everyday lives according to their nose.
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They sense the environment,
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which tells them really important information
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about how to stay alive, essentially.
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Just imagine you're a mosquito
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and you've just flown in from outside and you've entered this room.
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Now you're going to be entering a really complex world.
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You're going to be bombarded with smells from everywhere.
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We've just found out that we're really smelly beasts.
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Each one of us is producing different volatile chemicals.
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It's not just one chemical, like BO --
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lots and lots of chemicals.
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But it's not just you, it's the seats you're sitting on,
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the carpet, the glue that holds the carpet to the floor,
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the paint on the walls, the trees outside.
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Everything around you is producing an odor,
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and it's a really complex world that the mosquito has to fly through,
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and it has to find you within that really complex world.
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And each and every one of you will know --
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Come on, hands up, who always gets bitten by mosquitoes?
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And who never gets bitten?
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There's always one or two really annoying people that never get bitten.
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But the mosquito has a really hard job to find you,
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and that's all to do with the way you smell.
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People who don't attract mosquitoes smell repellent,
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and what we know is that --
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(Laughter)
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I should clarify, repellent to mosquitoes,
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not to people.
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(Laughter)
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And what we know now
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is that that is actually controlled by our genes.
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But mosquitoes are able to do that
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because they have a highly sophisticated sense of smell,
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and they're able to see through all the, sort of, odor sludge
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to find you, that individual, and bite you as a blood meal.
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But what would happen if one of you was infected with malaria?
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Well, let's just have a quick look at the malaria life cycle.
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So it's quite complex,
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but basically, what happens is a mosquito has to bite somebody to become infected.
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Once it bites an infected person,
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the parasite travels through the mouth part into the gut
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and then bursts through the gut, creates cysts,
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and then the parasites replicate,
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and then they make a journey from the gut all the way to the salivary glands,
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where they are then injected back into another person
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when the mosquito bites, because it injects saliva as it bites.
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Then, inside the human, it goes through a whole other cycle,
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a whole other part of the life cycle,
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so it goes through a liver stage, changes shape,
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and then comes out into the bloodstream again,
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and eventually, that person will become infectious.
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Now, one thing we know about the parasite world
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is that they are incredibly good at manipulating their hosts
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to enhance their own transmission,
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to make sure that they get passed onwards.
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If this was to happen in the malaria system,
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it might make sense
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that it would be something to do with odor that they manipulate,
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because odor is the key.
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Odor is the thing that links us between mosquitoes.
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That's how they find us.
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This is what we call the malaria manipulation hypothesis,
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and it's something that we've been working on over the last few years.
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So one of the first things that we wanted to do in our study
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was to find out whether an infection with malaria
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actually makes you more attractive to mosquitoes or not.
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So in Kenya, with our colleagues, we designed an experiment
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where we had participants, children in Kenya, sleep inside tents.
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The odor from the tent was blown into a chamber which contained mosquitoes,
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and the mosquitoes would behaviorally respond.
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They would fly towards or fly away from the odors,
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depending on whether they liked them or not.
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Now some of the participants were infected with malaria,
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and some of them were uninfected,
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but importantly,
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none of the children had any symptoms whatsoever.
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Now when we found and saw the results, it was really quite staggering.
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People who were infected with malaria
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were significantly more attractive than people who were uninfected.
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So let me explain this graph.
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We have "number of mosquitoes attracted to the child,"
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and we have two sets of data: before treatment and after treatment.
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On the far left-hand side,
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that bar represents a group of people who are uninfected,
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and as we move towards the right-hand side,
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these people have become infected
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and they're moving towards the stage that they're infectious.
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So right at the stage when people are infectious
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is when they are significantly more attractive.
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In this study, then, what we did
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is we obviously gave the children treatment
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to clear the parasites,
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and then we tested them again,
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and what we found was that highly attractive trait that was there
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disappeared after they had cleared the infection.
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So it wasn't just that the people were more attractive,
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it was that the parasite was manipulating its host in some way
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to make it more attractive to mosquitoes,
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standing out like a beacon to attract more mosquitoes
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so that it could continue its life cycle.
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The next thing we wanted to do was find out what it was
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the mosquito was actually smelling.
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What was it detecting?
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So to do that, we had to collect the body odor from the participants,
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and we did this by wrapping bags around their feet,
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which allowed us to collect the volatile odors from their feet,
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and feet are really important to mosquitoes.
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They really love the smell of feet.
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(Laughter)
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Especially cheesy feet. Anybody got cheesy feet back there?
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Mosquitoes love that smell.
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So we focused on the feet, and we collected the body odor.
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Now when it comes to mosquitoes and olfaction, their sense of smell,
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it's very complex.
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It would be really nice if there was just one chemical that they detected,
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but it's not that simple.
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They have to detect a number of chemicals
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in the right concentration, the right ratios,
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the right combinations of chemicals.
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So you can sort of think about it like a musical composition.
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So, you know, if you get the note wrong or you play it too loud or too soft,
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it doesn't sound right.
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Or a recipe: if you get an ingredient wrong
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or you cook it too long or too little, it doesn't taste right.
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Well, smell is the same.
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It's made up of a suite of chemicals in the right combination.
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Now our machines in the lab are not particularly good
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at picking out this sort of signal -- it's quite complex.
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But animals can, and what we do in my laboratory
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is we connect microelectrodes to the antennae of a mosquito.
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Imagine how fiddly that is.
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(Laughter)
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But what we also do is connect them to individual cells within the antennae,
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which is incredible.
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You don't want to sneeze when you're doing this,
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that's for sure.
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But what this does is it allows us
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to measure the electrical response of the smell receptors in the antennae,
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and so we can see what a mosquito is smelling.
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So I'm going to show you what this looks like.
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Here's an insect's cell,
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and it will respond in a second when I press this button,
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and you'll see it sort of ticking over with this response.
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An odor will be blown over the cell,
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and it will go a bit crazy, sort of blow a raspberry,
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and then it will go back to its resting potential when we stop the odor.
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(Rapid crackling)
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(Low-pitch crackling)
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(Rapid crackling)
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OK, there we go,
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so you can go home now and say that you've seen an insect smelling
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and even hearing an insect smelling -- it's a weird concept, isn't it?
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But this works really well,
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and this allows us to see what the insect is detecting.
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Now using this method with our malaria samples,
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we were able to find out what the mosquito was detecting,
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and we found the malaria-associated compounds, mainly aldehydes,
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a group of compounds that smelled, that signified the malaria signal here.
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So now we know what the smell of malaria is,
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and we've used the mosquito as a biosensor
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to tell us what the smell of malaria actually is.
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Now I'd like to imagine
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that you could, I don't know, put a harness on a little mosquito
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and put it on a lead and take it out and see if we can sniff people
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in a community --
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that goes on in my head --
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and see whether we could actually find people with malaria,
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but, of course, that's not really possible.
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But there is an animal that we can do that with.
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Now dogs have an incredible sense of smell,
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but there's something more special about them:
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they have an ability to learn.
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And most of you people will be familiar with this concept at airports,
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where dogs will go down a line and sniff out your luggage or yourself
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for drugs and explosives or even food as well.
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So we wanted to know, could we actually train dogs
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to learn the smell of malaria?
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And so we've been working with a charity called Medical Detection Dogs
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to see whether we can train them to learn the smell of malaria.
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And we went out to the Gambia and did some more odor collection
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on children that were infected and uninfected,
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but this time, we collected their odor
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by making them wear socks, nylon stockings,
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to collect their body odor.
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And we brought them back to the UK
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and then we handed them to this charity to run the experiment.
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Now I could show you a graph and tell you about that experiment works,
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but that'd be a bit dull, wouldn't it.
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Now, they do say never work with children or animals live,
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but we're going to break that rule today.
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So please welcome onto the stage Freya ...
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(Applause)
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and her trainers Mark and Sarah.
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(Applause)
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Of course, this is the real star of the show.
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(Laughter)
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OK, so now what I'm going to ask is if you can all just be a little bit quiet,
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not move around too much.
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This is a very, very strange environment for Freya.
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She's having a good look at you guys now.
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So let's stay as calm as possible. That would be great.
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So what we're going to do here is basically, we're going to ask Freya
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to move down this line of contraptions here,
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and in each one of these contraptions, we have a pot,
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and in the pot is a sock that has been worn by a child in the Gambia.
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Now three of the socks have been worn by children who were uninfected,
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and just one of the socks was worn by a child who was infected with malaria.
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So just as you would see an airport, imagine these were people,
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and the dog is going to go down and have a good sniff.
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And let's see if you can see when she senses the malaria,
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and if she senses the malaria.
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This is a really tough test for her in this very strange environment,
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so I'm going to hand it over now to Mark.
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(Laughs) Number three. OK.
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(Applause)
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There we go.
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I didn't know which pot that was in. Mark didn't know.
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This was a blind test, genuinely. Sarah, was that correct?
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Sarah: Yes.
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JL: That was correct. Well done, Freya. That is fantastic. Whew.
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(Applause)
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That is really wonderful.
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Now Sarah is going to actually change the pots around a little bit,
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and she's going to take the one with malaria away,
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and we're just going to have four pots that are containing socks from children
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that had no malaria,
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so in theory, Freya should go down the line and not stop at all.
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And this is really important,
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because we also need to know people who are not infected,
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she needs to be able to do that.
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And this is a tough test.
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These socks have been in the freezer for a couple of years now,
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and this is a tiny bit of a sock as well.
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So imagine if this was a whole person, giving off a big signal.
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So this is really incredible.
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OK, over to you, Mark.
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(Laughs)
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(Applause)
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Brilliant. Fantastic.
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(Applause)
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Really super. Thank you so much, guys.
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Big round of applause for Freya, Mark and Sarah.
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Well done, guys.
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(Applause)
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What a good girl. She's going to get a treat later.
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Fantastic.
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So you've just seen that for your own eyes.
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That was a real live demonstration. I was quite nervous about it.
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I'm so glad that it worked.
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(Laughter)
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But it is really incredible, and when we do this,
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what we find is that these dogs can correctly tell us
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when somebody is infected with malaria 81 percent of the time.
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It's incredible.
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92 percent of the time,
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they can tell us correctly when somebody does not have an infection.
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And those numbers are actually above the criteria
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set by the World Health Organization for a diagnostic.
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So we really are looking at deploying dogs in countries,
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and particularly at ports of entry,
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to detect people who have malaria.
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This could be a reality.
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But we can't deploy dogs everywhere,
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and so what we're also looking to do and working on at the moment
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is the development of technology,
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wearable tech that would empower the individual
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to allow them to self-diagnose.
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Imagine a patch that you wear on the skin
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that would detect in your sweat when you're infected with malaria
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and change color.
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Or something a little more technical, perhaps:
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a smartwatch that would alert you when you're infected with malaria.
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And if we can do this digitally, and we can collect data,
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imagine the amount of data that we can collect on a global scale.
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This could completely revolutionize
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the way that we track the spread of diseases,
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the way that we target our control efforts and respond to disease outbreaks,
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ultimately helping to lead to the eradication of malaria,
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and even beyond malaria,
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for other diseases that we already know have a smell.
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If we can harness the power of nature to find out what those smells are,
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we could do this and make this a reality.
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Now, as scientists, we're tasked with coming up with new ideas,
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new concepts, new technologies
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to tackle some of the world's greatest problems,
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but what never ceases to amaze me
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is that often nature has already done this for us,
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and the answer ...
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is right under our nose.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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