Do Gut Microbes Control Your Personality? | Kathleen McAuliffe | TED

408,951 views ・ 2024-01-22

TED


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00:04
We've been debating the question forever.
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Is there such a thing as free will?
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Am I captain of my ship?
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Master of my own destiny?
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I'm no philosopher.
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Biology is my realm and from where I stand,
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there is clearly more than one of us at the helm.
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I'm referring to the fact
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that half the cells in your body do not contain your own DNA.
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They belong to bacteria, protozoa, fungi
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and other unicellular creatures.
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These tiny tenants, collectively known as our microbiota,
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are most abundant in the gut,
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where they aid in digestion
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and carry out many other essential functions.
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Most amazing, they "talk" to your brain.
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They influence your mood,
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your energy level, your appetite,
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your memory,
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perhaps even your personality.
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I can say this with confidence
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owing to mice like this, which have no microbes.
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They've been dubbed bubble mice
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because they're raised in sterile facilities.
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Contrast their behavior to that of a normal mouse,
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which is colonized at birth with microbes,
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and you'll notice striking differences.
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A normal mouse is a quick and eager learner.
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Show it a novel object, like a napkin ring,
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and it will circle and sniff it with great interest.
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Place it in a maze and it's keen to explore new passages
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and remembers where it's been.
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A bubble mouse could not be more different.
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It lacks natural curiosity.
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It's slow to learn, quick to forget,
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and just as inclined to favor the familiar
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over what's new, exciting, or different.
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Indeed, they don't even protest
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if separated at a young age from their mothers,
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a trauma that in a normal mouse would lead to lifelong skittishness.
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But if you colonize a bubble mouse early in life
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with the normal microbiota for that strain,
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guess what happens?
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Their behavior normalizes.
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We're not mice.
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So does any of this apply to us?
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Actually a mountain of evidence suggests that it does.
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Consider this.
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If I transfer gut bacteria from an overweight twin to bubble mice,
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the animals fatten up.
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Transfer gut bacteria from a thin twin to bubble mice,
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feed them the same rat chow and the animals stay thin.
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Similarly, if I transfer gut bacteria from a depressed person
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to a bubble mouse,
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the animal will display depressive-like symptoms.
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For example, if placed in a water tank,
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it stops swimming sooner than a mouse that receives gut bacteria
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from a non-depressed person.
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That mouse will keep trying to escape.
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It's not so quick to give in to despair.
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How in the world can gut bacteria influence how we feel and act?
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They have many techniques, actually.
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But here's one of their coolest.
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Gut bacteria produce hoards of psychoactive compounds,
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including half a dozen neurotransmitters.
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Put simply, gut bacteria can talk to the brain because we,
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meaning our microbes and human cells,
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all speak the same language.
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In fact, some scientists think
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this language was actually invented by bacteria.
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I should point out that this long-distance conversation
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is facilitated by a major nerve cable that runs from your gut to your brain.
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It's called the vagus nerve,
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and it can be directly activated by bacteria
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or by the psychoactive compounds they produce.
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Incidentally, about 80 percent of the traffic on this cable
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is going from the gut to the brain and not the other way around,
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as had long been assumed.
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Of course, gut bacteria can also rely on the circulatory system
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to transport their psychoactive compounds upstairs.
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And there's one other very important, albeit indirect way
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that gut bacteria signal the brain.
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And that's by misbehaving.
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When aggressive bacteria invade the gut wall,
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immune cells rush to the scene
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and surprising scientists,
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those immune cells and related compounds don't always stay localized in the gut,
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but can travel to the brain
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where they trigger inflammation and depression.
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For reasons that are not well understood,
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inflammation and depression often go hand in hand.
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They're a destructive duo.
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Interestingly, a rapidly advancing treatment for mental disturbances
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is called vagus nerve stimulation, or VNS.
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As its name suggests,
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it entails electrically stimulating the vagus nerve
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via an electrode implanted in the chest.
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Although this therapy evolved independently of microbiota research,
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some scientists think
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that the current may actually mimic the effects of gut bacteria
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on the nerve.
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That's speculative, but what is clear is that VNS strengthens the gut barrier,
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preventing pathogenic bacteria from breaching it
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and causing an inflammatory response that spreads to the brain.
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Encouragingly, the FDA has already approved VNS
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for the treatment of severe epilepsy
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and depression unresponsive to standard therapy.
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What's more, early clinical trials suggest
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the procedure may also benefit people suffering from ADHD, OCD and PTSD.
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In parallel with these developments,
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microbiota researchers are attempting to treat mental disturbances
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by changing the composition of our gut bacteria
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or alternatively,
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by boosting or blocking the action of the chemicals these organisms make.
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To that end,
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they're making exciting progress
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in pinpointing exactly which bacteria are good or bad actors
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in various neuropsychiatric conditions.
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People with autism spectrum disorder, for example,
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often have high amounts of a bacteria molecule in their blood,
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and in rodents,
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this molecule has been shown to raise anxiety
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and even alter brain connectivity.
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Axial Therapeutics,
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a company at the forefront of developing microbiota-based treatments,
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is now conducting a clinical trial of a drug
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designed to prevent this destructive molecule
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from reaching the brain.
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The goal is to treat irritability in children with autism.
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Meanwhile, a bacterium found in yogurt called Lactobacillus reuteri
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has shown to promote social bonding in animal models of autism.
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Both good and bad bacteria have similarly been linked
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to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS.
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That's the neurodegenerative disease
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best known for paralyzing the great baseball player Lou Gehrig
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at the peak of his career.
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Like him, most patients die within just a few years
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of being diagnosed with the disease.
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A small minority live ten years or longer.
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In animal models of ALS,
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Israeli researchers have recently discovered two bacteria
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that accelerate the disease
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and another that slows its development.
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They suspect the benefits of the good bacteria
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are due to a vitamin that it produces, called nicotinamide.
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Microbiota researchers are making even greater progress
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in unraveling the root causes of Parkinson's disease.
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If you know the actor Michael J. Fox,
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if you've seen many of his videos,
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you'll know its symptoms are shaking,
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stiffness and an unsteady gait.
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It's long been known that the disease involves the misfolding of a protein
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called alpha-synuclein in this part of the brain.
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As the misfolding spreads, brain cells start to die,
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symptoms worsen.
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The big mystery is, what causes alpha-synuclein,
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the Parkinson's protein,
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to misfolded in the first place.
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Several labs have recently converged on one likely culprit.
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The guts of some people, their research suggests,
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harbor a strain of E. coli
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that churns out a misfolded compound very similar to the Parkinson's protein.
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And when misfolded variants of this protein
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are injected into the guts of susceptible rodents,
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it causes the normal protein in the intestinal lining
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to misfold in turn.
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Like falling dominoes,
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this wave of misfolding proteins slowly spreads up the vagus nerve,
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and in about two months,
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you see clumped up protein in exactly the part of the brain
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that degenerates in Parkinson's patients.
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Most importantly,
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these fresh glimpses into the origins of the disease
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are suggesting new ways of intervening in its progression,
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a prospect, needless to say, that has experts super excited.
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Of course, it's early days.
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We don't yet know
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whether successful treatments will emerge from this line of research,
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or, for that matter,
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any of the other investigations I've described.
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But I think you'll agree there's cause for optimism.
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If nothing else, I hope I've convinced you that your behavior is controlled
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not just from the top down,
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but quite literally from the bottom up.
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In short, the person you call "I" is really "we."
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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