Transcript
5w6r6RD85rg • The Evolution of Venom & Antivenom | Sean B. Carroll
/home/itcorpmy/itcorp.my.id/harry/yt_channel/out/novapbs/.shards/text-0001.zst#text/1106_5w6r6RD85rg.txt
Kind: captions Language: en Loss is really common when we look um you know through evolution. I mean you know look at things that creatures that are kind of marked by loss. One of my favorite groups are snakes right? >> Oh the legs. >> Where are those legs? >> Right. Well they became burrowing creatures a whole lifestyle. So they evolved from lizards right? So they evolved from four-legged animals. But you have this whole group of animals. They just >> ditched their legs. Right. Ditch their ears too. >> Oh geez. >> No ears on snakes either. Right man. So, um, yeah, loss is pretty common. At the same time, they're pretty efficient. >> Snakes are pretty efficient. >> They just reduce themselves to a tube. >> They're a tube. Yes. With great muscles, >> but they've been doing a lot of inventing. >> Yeah. >> Venomous snakes. >> Venom. Yes. >> Venomous snakes. And are have been incredibly uh creative in the last 30 or 40 million years, inventing all sorts of venom toxins to take down their prey. And that's another example we see throughout the animal kingdom. Independent examples, right? You know about spider venom. you know about bee venom, you know about scorpion venom, you know about you know uh venomous uh jellyfish and stuff all independent inventions >> wow >> of venom. So these are new molecules that get invented, right? So this is inventions going all the time, but that helps those animals get their supper. And that's a [clears throat] really powerful force in evolution, right? It this if you have a way to get your prey, you have a way to get food, this is a really this is like evolution almost in uh fast forward. >> So language for humans is like venom for the other animals, [laughter] right? You can cooperate and hunt. >> Well, in our culture today, language is very much like venom. Yeah. But I think you're making that analogy. But yeah, these are this is uh you know, venom is a special power that these animals have and it's vital to essentially their their daily being. And you know, language is something. Yeah, we came up with walking on two legs and and language. >> Uh pretty big inventions. Could you take embryionic hakee and stick a needle in me, change a instruction, and I now have fangs and venom? [snorts] >> Yep. [laughter] >> Oh, what? What? >> Now, I'm gonna say in principle, I wouldn't say it's impossible. It's probably a little bit of knowledge that we would need to build for. But when you know the program for making teeth and we know a lot about it and when you know how you might be able to sort of modify that a little bit to make an elongated tooth with a with a central canal which is a fang. >> Okay. Then we could we could tweak that, right? >> Wow. So >> and then you know I we know how to make venom. >> Wow. That's what I wanted to get into man because making this this molecule venom it is such a mysterious thing to me. I was like how would that even come about? Right. Oh, it's the general idea here is this. >> All these characteristics we're talking about, all these creatures that fascinate us, right? The instructions for making them are in the DNA. >> And that book has been blown wide open to us, right? >> So, let me ask you a question about that then. That's I'm sorry to interrupt. >> Oh, no. Go. Anytime. >> Does every animal have all of the instruction book? Is it or or is it later animals have all of it because they have everything that came earlier? >> Oh, everybody's got their own instruction book. Sometimes some chapters have been torn out and left behind. Okay. and some have some new chapters. >> So, but they have a lot of instructions in common because they have they have their animalness in common. They have a lot of cell biology in common which even is deeper than animals that they got cell biology that's in common with fungi and bacteria and plants and stuff like that. Right? >> So, there's there's some common parts of the code book. There's some unique parts. But that codebook which was again not accessible to us in starting to become accessible in the early 1980s and then >> today oh my goodness I mean you know the speed and the cost involved is is now almost trivial right where it used to be you know too expensive or impossible. So yeah, I mean we can we can look at any animal. We are having a great time. We are having a great time. >> And um so what we do it's kind of it's it's a lot of science is detective work, right? You're playing hunches. You're trying to look around. You're trying to find those clues, etc. And kind of DNA science these days is exactly detective work. You're saying, I okay, I've got this creature here that doesn't have this capability. I got this creature here that does have this capability. And I'm looking around to try to figure out what does it have that it doesn't have. >> Right? >> And if I compare, for example, nonvenenomous animals, take a lizard or something like that, to venomous snakes or nonvenenomous snakes to venomous snakes, I can see exactly what's going on when I look in the right place in the genome. >> And that's telling us that what's happened is again this co-option thing, taking something that was used for some other purpose and repurposing it. And so what's basically happening is that snakes are taking proteins that have been used inside the body to do something normal. They're making them usually in significant amounts in a gland and putting them into prey through that fang and they're putting sort of abnormal amounts of of something either the same or a modified protein into that prey and usually disrupting one of two things. And and things like venomous snakes, they're either messing up blood heasis like clotting and heart rate and and blood pressure >> or the nervous system. They're stopping the nervous system. So, for example, respiratory arrest. >> So, how does this begin before I'm sure it doesn't start out as full-blown fang venom gland. So, they're so the chemicals just being secreted in their mouth and they bite and then >> probably components of saliva. Yeah. And imagine the way these animals were first taken down their prey was they're biting and holding on. >> Yeah. >> Now, biting and holding on is kind of dangerous, >> right? You can go for a bad ride and get really roughed up. Yeah. >> So, you can imagine the ability to strike and then sit back while the prey dies >> is a little bit safer attack mode, right? So, if you can deliver something in your prey during that initial bite >> that will subdue it. >> Yeah. >> Then there you go. And so, >> we've got a lot of enzymes in our mouth. We had a lot of enzymes in our saliva. Okay. And so what what venom evolved from was some basic capability of having, you know, digestive enzymes and things like this in our saliva. And instead of just sort of those things passively getting transferred during a bite, uh through this modified tooth, the fang, a a delivery apparatus evolved that could deliver a more potent wallop of that kind of stuff. >> Wow. So you can sort of feel that transition from a bite, hold on with some kind of weak saliva, >> right, >> to strike, sit back, very potent, venom delivered and and let it do the job. >> This sounds somewhat like what you described earlier where you connect >> genes, but now you're connecting the a saliva gland to a tooth formation gland. >> Yeah. >> And now they become a single system of venom. >> Now that's that's an apparatus. Yeah. that that that then does your job. And when we look at the venom components and these are these are fascinating sorts of things and I I I got so many stories I want I'm trying I'm running my head and say which one should I really tell you? >> Yeah. >> But I'll tell you one that's that's really striking that one of my students is studying right now. So I don't know the reputation Australian snakes have right. We've probably heard Australia's dangerous. >> Yeah. I was as we're having this conversation I was sitting here thinking about the box jellyfish which is another >> another one. Yeah. So on land they had a couple snakes called brown snakes and taipans. And uh they make me nervous. Okay. >> And I like snakes. And here's the deal. >> Have you been bitten? >> Uh I've been bitten by nonvenenomous snakes. Yeah. I got an old buddy that uh uh he had a great saying which was he said there were two kinds of snake enthusiasts. Those who' never been bitten and those have been bitten a lot. [laughter] >> So there's no if that comes from. Yeah. Because Okay. You can you can you can piece that together [laughter] anyway. >> Oh, I get it. >> Yeah. Yeah. So, >> uh, taipans and brown snakes, they're remarkably toxic. So, so you know, ounce for ounce of their venom, one of the most toxic things on the planet. What have they done? And this is just to give you a picture of what what's the strategy of venom. If you look at what their venom does to the prey blood, you can watch it in a test tube. It will clot like that. >> Okay. What they've done is they've taken two clotting proteins, proteins that we normally use to clot our blood in response to injury. >> Yeah. >> Packed them into the venom gland. They inject them into prey and that blood clots like that. [clears throat] >> So, it's essentially a instantaneous stroke and loss of blood pressure. >> Prey down. >> Wow. So they've taken proteins that are used inside the body and then using them kind of outside their own bodies onto prey >> and that's the strategy of the venom. So you'd think venom wait what is this kind of you know >> special substance etc. No it's using existing proteins >> in a new way. >> Wow. >> Right. Yeah. >> And you can see when you ha or when you already have that protein that can clot blood. It's just a matter of making more of it and delivering it in a new way into another creature in an unregulated way. So that creature that creature balances blood clotting very carefully. You just overwhelm it and it clots instantly. >> Do the prey respond with evolutionary changes to resistant venom. >> Brilliant. It's it's an arms race out there. It's an arms race out there. And we see this all Yeah, we see this all over the world. >> When prey are being prayed upon by venomous creatures, they're evolving all sorts of mechanisms. Some of those are well they're all sorts of levels. So the targets of the venom toxins are evolving. There's a lot of pressure, right? Because if you can be less susceptible, then that means maybe you you got better chance of surviving a bite >> or a bite that's sublethal is not as >> hazardous, you know, that sort of thing. >> It's going on all it's remarkable. So this is the the joy to an evolutionary biologist or you might say the purpose to an evolutionary biologist is studying this is that those arms races going on meaning the the there's pressure for the predator for the for the venomous animal to keep coming up with more and more potent venom and there's pressure for the prey to keep coming up with ways to evade that venom. So you sort of have evolution in fast motion going on in both sides and that allows us to to it it makes the evolutionary process sort of we just have more stuff we can dig into when it's when it's happening on that kind of time scale. So it's measured countermeasured that's why we call we refer to them as as arms races obviously from from the human analogy. >> It it's all over the place. You go out west >> there are you know rodents that are you know resistant to rattlesnakes. There are snakes that feed on rattlesnakes that are resistant to rattlesnakes. >> Oh yeah. So here here's a question. So when we develop antivenenoms from the movies I've watched. >> Yeah. [laughter] >> They we typically make the antivenenom from the venom. >> Yes. >> Do we ever use the praise mechanism to create antivenenom? >> God, you got great questions. Nobody's done it yet, but I think that's the I think that's the new opportunity now that we've learned enough. This is actually something my lab works on. Now as we learn enough about the natural defense mechanisms yeah we can exploit them. So what we did this antivenenoms got started in the late 19th century at the same time we were making like antitoxins for for things like dtheria toxin and tetanus toxin and stuff and what we do is we would immunize an animal like a horse >> with these toxins or venoms take the blood of that horse we'd refine it and that would be the product we would give people who if they had tetanas or if they got bitten by a snake. Okay. So that's a 19th century. So you're using that animal's immune system that has been exposed. >> That's right. That's right. And given that um [clears throat] and you know we use antibodies today, I mean you know half the drugs that we use today are monocone antibodies that we make in a lab that we give people for everything from cancer to eczema or whatever that sort of thing. >> But these natural defense mechanisms, some of them look really to me they look really really potent and broadly acting. And I think I think there going to be some antivenenoms coming out of this new branch of knowledge from the from the way that the prey defense mechanisms work.