The Deep Sea's Medicinal Secrets | Sam Afoullouss | TED

43,431 views ・ 2022-04-11

TED


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

00:04
Who here, a year or two ago, thought that they'd be living
0
4602
3840
00:08
through a global pandemic?
1
8482
1640
00:10
A new virus that spread across the world
2
10462
3160
00:13
and killed millions.
3
13662
1420
00:15
One of the scariest things about this virus
4
15462
2640
00:18
is that when it broke out
5
18122
1420
00:19
we had next to no cures or treatments to fight against COVID-19.
6
19562
5060
00:25
But viruses, new and old, aren't our only worries.
7
25262
3160
00:28
From infectious bacteria that have become immune to our antibiotics
8
28742
4000
00:32
to increased rates of cancers,
9
32762
1980
00:34
humanity is struggling to find solutions to our ever-evolving medical needs.
10
34782
5260
00:40
To find our medicines of the future, we’re turning to Mother Nature for help.
11
40482
4500
00:45
My name is Sam Afoullouss, and I’m an underwater alchemist.
12
45602
3200
00:49
But instead of turning led to gold,
13
49342
2640
00:52
I'm turning Ireland's hidden treasure,
14
52002
2220
00:54
deep-sea coral reefs,
15
54242
1560
00:55
into our medicines of the future.
16
55842
2200
00:58
For thousands of years,
17
58962
1620
01:00
we have turned to natural remedies
18
60602
1960
01:02
made from the plants and animals that surround us
19
62582
2900
01:05
to cure us of our ailments.
20
65502
2220
01:07
Put your hand up if, when you have a cold or a cough,
21
67742
3220
01:10
you use natural treatments like honey or ginger to help relieve your symptoms.
22
70982
4620
01:17
Hot whiskeys?
23
77442
1240
01:18
(Laughter)
24
78702
1500
01:20
The reason why these natural remedies work
25
80622
2580
01:23
is they rely on molecules called specialized metabolites
26
83222
3980
01:27
that are mainly produced by organisms that can’t move,
27
87222
3320
01:30
like plants and mushrooms,
28
90582
1920
01:32
to defend themselves from diseases and predators.
29
92522
3120
01:36
Over the past 200 years,
30
96182
2160
01:38
scientists have traveled to the four corners of our world
31
98362
3640
01:42
in search of organisms that may contain these medicinal molecules.
32
102022
4820
01:46
This fundamental research has resulted in over half our medicines today
33
106862
4960
01:51
being derived and inspired by natural sources.
34
111842
3380
01:55
Although these scientists scoured the surface of our planet
35
115962
3360
01:59
for organisms with these potential medicines,
36
119362
2940
02:02
there was one area that remained underexplored --
37
122322
3140
02:05
and it just so happened to be the biggest part.
38
125482
2940
02:09
The oceans.
39
129342
1260
02:10
Our oceans cover over three quarters of the Earth's surface
40
130942
3300
02:14
and contain the most biodiverse ecosystems on our planet.
41
134262
3640
02:18
In Ireland, we own eight times more ocean than we do land,
42
138322
4320
02:22
and it's filled with forms of life that seem alien to us.
43
142662
3560
02:26
All of these creatures you see here,
44
146662
2240
02:28
I photographed in Irish waters along the Connemara coastline,
45
148922
4160
02:33
and you can discover them for yourselves if you visit rock pools
46
153102
3440
02:36
or snorkel through the kelp forests.
47
156562
2080
02:39
When Jacques Cousteau invented scuba diving in the 1940s,
48
159342
4020
02:43
this provided scientists with the tools
49
163382
2080
02:45
required to explore these diverse ecosystems.
50
165482
3120
02:49
Now they could spend hours underwater,
51
169102
2720
02:51
uncovering hundreds of new species
52
171842
2480
02:54
from colorful corals to spectacular sponges
53
174362
2780
02:57
of all shapes and sizes.
54
177162
2040
02:59
When chemists got their hands on these samples
55
179702
2320
03:02
and started analyzing the molecules that these animals made,
56
182042
3380
03:05
they were amazed.
57
185442
1320
03:06
New molecules,
58
186782
1180
03:07
many of which chemists thought would be impossible to form.
59
187982
3420
03:11
But then Mother Nature had something to say.
60
191782
2980
03:15
When they tested the potential of turning these new molecules into medicines,
61
195462
4720
03:20
they found that many of these new molecules
62
200202
2520
03:22
could kill the most potent of drug-resistant bacteria,
63
202742
3720
03:26
destroy the most virulent of cancers
64
206482
2520
03:29
and even be used to treat pain.
65
209042
2200
03:32
There are 17 medicines today in your local pharmacies and hospitals
66
212002
4600
03:36
that are derived from marine sources.
67
216622
2600
03:43
One of these medicines, in particular, ziconotide,
68
223642
3400
03:47
was isolated from the Conus magus,
69
227062
2900
03:50
also known as the magical cone snail.
70
230002
2800
03:53
What's magic about this sea snail
71
233422
1980
03:55
isn't just its beautiful shell and pattern,
72
235422
3000
03:58
but one of the natural molecules it produces
73
238442
2520
04:00
is such an effective painkiller
74
240982
2180
04:03
that it’s 1,000 times stronger than morphine.
75
243182
3140
04:06
And you’re probably asking yourself:
76
246702
2100
04:08
Why would a sea snail produce something
77
248822
2520
04:11
that’s 1,000 times stronger than morphine?
78
251362
2740
04:14
Is that why they're slow?
79
254562
1700
04:16
(Laughter)
80
256282
1160
04:18
And the answer?
81
258342
1280
04:19
Ingenious evolution.
82
259662
1760
04:22
See, these sea snails hunt fish,
83
262062
2180
04:24
and they don't have the speed to chase down their prey
84
264262
2540
04:26
like a lion hunts a gazelle.
85
266842
1720
04:28
So instead, they harpoon their prey
86
268862
2860
04:31
injecting it with a potent mixture of neurotoxins
87
271742
3320
04:35
like ziconotide, that paralyze the fish instantly.
88
275082
4040
04:39
It's ziconotide's ability to target the nervous system of vertebrates like us
89
279702
5240
04:44
that makes it such an effective painkiller.
90
284962
2540
04:48
And while scuba diving was a revolutionary leap forward,
91
288302
3360
04:51
allowing scientists to study our coastal marine ecosystems,
92
291682
3940
04:55
our oceans extend far past our shores to unimaginable depths.
93
295642
4980
05:01
We can only dive so deep
94
301162
1860
05:03
before the physical pressure pressing down causes lethal effects.
95
303042
3960
05:07
This left the vast majority of our oceans underexplored.
96
307022
4160
05:11
More people have been to space
97
311822
2100
05:13
than have been to our oceans' deepest depths.
98
313942
2900
05:17
To find our medicines of the future,
99
317682
2460
05:20
we went to explore these depths on the research vessel
100
320162
3220
05:23
The Celtic Explorer,
101
323402
1780
05:25
and sailed south from Irish shores
102
325202
2100
05:27
to some of the largest geographical features that scar our planet.
103
327322
4060
05:31
Submarine canyon systems like Whittard Canyon,
104
331862
3800
05:35
where the sea floor drops from 300 meters to 3,000 meters.
105
335702
5300
05:41
And it's here in some of the most extreme environmental conditions in the world
106
341442
5360
05:46
that deep-sea coral reefs flourish.
107
346842
2760
05:50
Conditions at these depths are so extreme
108
350222
2680
05:52
we have to use a state of the art robotic submarine
109
352942
3540
05:56
the size of a minibus to collect our samples.
110
356502
3200
06:00
And when I say extreme conditions, I really mean extreme.
111
360182
4300
06:05
Unlike the coral reefs that the cone snails inhabit,
112
365422
3220
06:08
instead of the water being warm and tropical,
113
368662
2800
06:11
it's the same temperature as your fridge.
114
371482
2040
06:14
Instead of it being bright, clear and sunny,
115
374062
3160
06:17
it's pitch black and has never seen the light of day,
116
377242
3840
06:21
permanently bathed in eternal darkness.
117
381102
3120
06:24
And instead of being able to swim around freely,
118
384802
2780
06:27
if you were to dive to these depths,
119
387622
1740
06:29
you would be crushed in seconds with the sheer pressure,
120
389382
3360
06:32
equating to the weight of 20 elephants standing on your head.
121
392762
4080
06:37
Even with these harsh conditions,
122
397582
2220
06:39
deep-sea coral reefs are among the most biodiverse ecosystems in the world,
123
399822
4540
06:44
rivaling that of the Great Barrier Reef and the Amazonian rainforest.
124
404382
4320
06:49
In this one picture alone,
125
409322
1760
06:51
there are hundreds of unique species,
126
411102
2300
06:53
from starfish to sea fans, cup corals to crinoids,
127
413422
4040
06:57
all of which have adapted over millions of years
128
417482
3280
07:00
to thrive in this unforgiving environment.
129
420802
3000
07:05
Many of these animals are new to science
130
425082
2800
07:07
and remain in the final frontier in studying life on our planet.
131
427902
4440
07:12
Some of these animals are so alien, like deep sea jellyfish,
132
432922
4240
07:17
that they even inspired the creatures in James Cameron's "Avatar"
133
437182
3740
07:20
after the director explored the deep sea.
134
440942
2680
07:24
This abundance of biodiversity creates competition,
135
444942
4240
07:29
especially between the filter-feeding animals to fight for space,
136
449202
4060
07:33
to grow as far out into the water currents as possible
137
453282
3120
07:36
to catch as much food as possible.
138
456422
2540
07:39
For millions of years,
139
459402
1540
07:40
this battle for space and food has raged on in the darkness,
140
460962
4180
07:45
resulting in some of the most beautiful biological creations
141
465162
3540
07:48
our world is yet to see.
142
468722
1920
07:51
And this is an example of some of that beauty.
143
471122
2900
07:54
A two-meter-wide trumpet sponge we found at a depth of 1.5 kilometers.
144
474542
5220
08:00
This species of sponge has evolved to grow
145
480402
3000
08:03
an intricate skeleton of interwoven glass fibers
146
483422
3780
08:07
that stretch out into the current.
147
487222
2260
08:10
But this beauty comes with a dark side.
148
490002
4320
08:15
It turns out the battle for these sponges and corals to survive and thrive
149
495042
5120
08:20
is a battle that relies on chemical warfare.
150
500182
3240
08:24
My aim is to isolate these chemical weapons,
151
504042
3320
08:27
which we can then utilize in our own fight
152
507382
2680
08:30
against microbes and cancers.
153
510082
2120
08:33
If you look closely at this sponge, there are these tiny yellow dots.
154
513062
4200
08:37
Each of those yellow dots is a coral-like animal growing on the sponge,
155
517282
4740
08:42
using it as a scaffold to feed in the currents.
156
522062
3080
08:45
This can negatively affect the sponge.
157
525922
2120
08:48
So in a response, the sponge and its microbiome
158
528062
3380
08:51
produce toxic compounds to kill the corals.
159
531462
2940
08:54
And in a response to that,
160
534422
1640
08:56
the corals produce their own toxic compounds to kill the sponge.
161
536082
3260
09:00
It's these compounds we aim to develop into new anti-cancer therapies
162
540162
4420
09:04
and future antibiotics.
163
544602
1860
09:07
But these reefs contain thousands of species,
164
547322
2940
09:10
and each species may contain thousands of molecules,
165
550282
3740
09:14
so you might imagine that finding the one that could be a cure for a type of cancer
166
554042
4760
09:18
or might stop the next pandemic
167
558822
2020
09:20
would be like the proverbial finding a needle in a haystack.
168
560882
3240
09:25
In the dark.
169
565442
1140
09:26
(Laughter)
170
566622
1140
09:28
But the same way that we soak berries and spices in alcohol to make gin,
171
568662
5120
09:33
we soak our corals and sponges in alcohol to make coral and sponge gin,
172
573802
5100
09:38
which we call extract.
173
578922
1700
09:41
We then feed this extract to different diseases --
174
581142
2980
09:44
cancers, malaria, viruses,
175
584142
2660
09:46
even brain-eating amoebas -- and we wait.
176
586822
3220
09:50
Most of the time, nothing happens.
177
590662
2540
09:54
But every once in a while,
178
594062
2540
09:56
one of these extracts manages to kill a disease,
179
596622
3300
09:59
letting us know it contains a natural molecule
180
599942
3220
10:03
with the potential to be turned into a medicine.
181
603182
2720
10:06
We then isolate these molecules
182
606682
2060
10:08
and test them against the disease again
183
608762
2380
10:11
until we find the one,
184
611162
1860
10:13
the one molecule that has resulted from millions of years of evolution
185
613042
4420
10:17
in our oceans' dark depths
186
617482
1980
10:19
that we can now use in our own wars against cancers,
187
619482
3780
10:23
bacteria and viruses.
188
623282
2280
10:26
But once we find these medicines,
189
626982
2180
10:29
we can't just rip these animals from the reef as our source.
190
629182
3300
10:32
That would destroy the very vital biodiversity
191
632862
3020
10:35
and resulting competition that created these molecules in the first place.
192
635902
4360
10:41
We don't need to come up with a complex mechanism
193
641262
2780
10:44
for manufacturing them in a lab.
194
644062
2240
10:46
Some of these molecules are so complex we couldn't even if we tried.
195
646322
4220
10:51
But Mother Nature has done the hard work for us.
196
651562
2920
10:55
Hidden in the DNA of these animals and their associated microbes
197
655462
4280
10:59
are the genes which carry the biological recipes
198
659762
4640
11:04
for producing these molecules.
199
664422
2000
11:07
Using cutting-edge techniques,
200
667082
2040
11:09
we can take these genes and insert them into microbes like yeast,
201
669142
4980
11:14
allowing us to grow them in a bioreactor,
202
674142
2700
11:16
getting the microbes to do the hard work for us,
203
676862
2900
11:19
producing our medicines in a sustainable, cost-effective way
204
679782
4140
11:23
without the need for harsh chemicals,
205
683942
2240
11:26
such as heavy metals,
206
686202
1500
11:27
that can be required in more traditional manufacturing processes.
207
687722
3540
11:32
Our research isn't just to help protect the health of humanity,
208
692402
3500
11:35
but also to protect the health of these hidden reefs.
209
695922
3120
11:39
Deep-sea reefs wrap around our entire planet,
210
699562
3080
11:42
and already over half the reefs that exist
211
702662
2960
11:45
have been destroyed,
212
705642
1420
11:47
turned to lifeless rubble by trawling and longline fishing.
213
707082
3620
11:51
With new threats on the horizon, like deep-sea mining,
214
711362
3320
11:54
they're in more danger now than ever before.
215
714702
2860
11:58
By proving that their unique biodiversity
216
718442
2820
12:01
can be a natural resource for providing us with new medicines,
217
721282
4500
12:05
not only does this give a public health incentive to protect these reefs,
218
725802
4220
12:10
but a financial one also.
219
730042
1840
12:12
Like how safari tours provide the economic incentive
220
732402
3620
12:16
to conserve savanna ecosystems,
221
736042
2720
12:18
potential profits from pharmaceutical sales
222
738782
2860
12:21
could provide the financial sustainability to explore and protect these reefs.
223
741662
5260
12:28
We need new medicines today more than ever before,
224
748122
3960
12:32
and the incredible biodiversity that deep-sea reefs offer
225
752102
4100
12:36
have created a fantastic library of natural molecules,
226
756222
4000
12:40
which we can develop into our future medicines.
227
760242
2760
12:43
Already, our research group has found potential medicines against asthma,
228
763762
4800
12:48
malaria and even COVID-19,
229
768582
2980
12:51
showing the unbelievable potential of these reefs.
230
771582
3340
12:55
To protect our own health
231
775722
2280
12:58
we need to protect the health of deep-sea coral reefs.
232
778022
3780
13:02
Our future pharmacies
233
782402
2740
13:05
are hidden in our seas.
234
785162
2480
13:08
Thank you.
235
788482
1160
13:09
(Applause)
236
789662
3900
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