[Script Info] Title: [Events] Format: Layer, Start, End, Style, Name, MarginL, MarginR, MarginV, Effect, Text Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,I want to talk to you\Nabout the future of medicine, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,but before I do that, I want to talk\Na little bit about the past. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Now, throughout much\Nof the recent history of medicine, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,we've thought about illness and treatment Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in terms of a profoundly simple model. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,In fact, the model is so simple Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,that you could summarize it in six words: Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,have disease, take pill, kill something. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Now, the reason for\Nthe dominance of this model Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,is of course the antibiotic revolution. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Many of you might not know this,\Nbut we happen to be celebrating Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,the hundredth year of the introduction\Nof antibiotics into the United States, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,but what you do know Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,is that that introduction\Nwas nothing short of transformative. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Here you had a chemical,\Neither from the natural world Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,or artificially synthesized\Nin the laboratory, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and it would course through your body, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,it would find its target, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,lock into its target -- Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,a microbe or some part of a microbe -- Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and then turn off a lock and a key Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,with exquisite deftness,\Nexquisite specificity, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and you would end up taking\Na previously fatal, lethal disease, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,a pneumonia, syphilis, tuberculosis, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and transforming that into a curable,\Nor treatable illness. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You have a pneumonia,\Nyou take penicillin, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,you kill the microbe, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and you cure the disease. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So seductive was this idea, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,so potent the metaphor of lock and key Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and killing something, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,that it really swept through biology. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,It was a transformation like no other, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and we've really spent the last 100 years Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,trying to replicate that model\Nover and over again Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in noninfectious diseases, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in chronic diseases like diabetes\Nand hypertension and heart disease. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And it's worked,\Nbut it's only worked partly. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Let me show you. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You know, if you take the entire universe Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,of all chemical reactions\Nin the human body, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,every chemical reaction\Nthat your body gets, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,most people think that that number\Nis on the order of a million. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Let's call it a million. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And now you ask the question, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,what number or fraction of reactions Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,can actually be targeted Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,by the entire pharmacopia,\Nall of medicinal chemistry? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,That number is 250. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,The rest is chemical darkness. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,In other words, 0.025 percent\Nof all chemical reactions in your body Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,are actually targetable\Nby this lock and key mechanism. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You know, if you think about\Nhuman physiology Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,as a vast global telephone network Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,with interacting nodes\Nand interacting pieces, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,then all of our medicinal chemistry Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,is all operating on one tiny corner Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,at the edge, the outer edge,\Nof that network. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,It's like all of our\Npharmaceutical chemistry Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,is a pole operator in Wichita, Kansas Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,who is tinkering with\Nabout 10 or 15 telephone lines. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So what do about this idea? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,What if we reorganized this approach? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,In fact, it turns out\Nthat the natural world Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,gives us a sense of how one\Nmight think about illness Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in a radically different way, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,rather than disease, medicine, target. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,In fact, the natural world\Nis organized hierarchically upwards, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,not downwards, but upwards, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and we begin with a self-regulating,\Nsemi-autonomous unit called a cell. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,These self-regulating,\Nsemi-autonomous units Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,give rise to self-regulating,\Nsemi-autonomous units called organs, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and these organs coalesce\Nto form things called humans, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and these organisms ultimately live\Nin environments, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,which are partly self-regulating\Nand partly semi-autonomous. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,What's nice about this scheme,\Nthis hierarchical scheme Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,building upwards rather than downwards Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,is that it allows us to think\Nabout illness as well Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in a somewhat different way. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Take a disease like cancer. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Since the 1950s, we've tried\Nrather desperately to apply Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,this lock and key model to cancer. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,We've tried to kill cells using a variety\Nof chemotherapies or targeted therapies, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and as most of us know, that's worked. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,It's worked for diseases like leukemia. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,It's worked for some forms\Nof breast cancer, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,but eventually you run\Nto the ceiling of that approach, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and it's only in the last 10 years or so Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,that we've begun to think\Nabout using the immune system, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,remembering that in fact the cancer cell\Ndoesn't grow in a vacuum. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,It actually grows in a human organism, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and could you use the organismal capacity, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,the fact that human beings\Nhave an immune system, to attack cancer? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,In fact, it's led to the some of the most\Nspectacular new medicines in cancer. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And finally, I mean, there's the level\Nof the environment, isn't there. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You know, we don't think of cancer\Nas altering the environment. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Let me give you an example\Nof a profoundly carcinogenic environment. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,It's called a prison. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You take loneliness, you take depression,\Nyou take confinement, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and you add to that, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,rolled up in a little white\Nsheet of paper, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,one of the most potent neurostimulants\Nthat we know, called nicotine, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and you add to that one of the most potent\Naddictive substances that you know, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and you have a pro-carcinogenic\Nenvironment. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,But you can have anti-carcinogenic\Nenvironments too. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,There are attempts to create milieus, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,change the hormonal milieu\Nfor breast cancer, for instance. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,We're trying to change the metabolic\Nmilieu for other forms of cancer. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Or take another disease, like depression. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Again, working others, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,since the 1960s and 1970s,\Nwe've tried, again, desperately Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,to turn off molecules that operate\Nbetween nerve cells -- Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,serotonin, dopamine -- Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and tried to cure depression that way,\Nand that's worked, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,but then that leads to the limit. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And we now know that what you\Nreally probably need to do Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,is to change the physiology\Nof the organ, the brain, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,rewire it, remodel it, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and that of course, we know\Nstudy upon study has shown Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,that talk therapy does exactly that, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and study upon study has shown\Nthat talk therapy combined Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,with medicines, pills, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,really is much more effective\Nthan either one alone. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Can we imagine a more immersive\Nenvironment that will change depression? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Can you lock out the signals\Nthat elicit depression? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Again, moving upwards along this\Nhierarchical chain of organization. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,What's really at stake perhaps here Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,is not the medicine itself but a metaphor. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Rather than killing something, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in the case of the great\Nchronic degenerative diseases -- Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,kidney failure, diabetes,\Nhypertension, osteoarthritis -- Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,maybe what we really need to do is change\Nthe metaphor to growing something. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And that's the key, perhaps, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,to reframing our thinking about medicine. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Now, this idea of changing, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,of creating a perceptual shift,\Nas it were, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,came home to me to roost in a very,\Nvery personal matter about 10 years ago. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,About 10 years ago --\NI've been a runner most of my life -- Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,I went for a run, a Saturday morning run, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,I came back and woke up\Nand I basically couldn't move. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,My right knee was swollen up, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and you could hear that ominous crunch\Nof bone against bone. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And one of the perks of being a physician\Nis that you get to order your own MRIs. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And I had an MRI the next week,\Nand it looked like that. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Essentially, the meniscus of cartilage\Nthat is between bone Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,had been completely torn\Nand the bone itself had been shattered. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Now, if you're looking at me\Nand feeling sorry, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,let me tell you a few facts. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,If I was to take an MRI\Nof every person in this audience, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,60 percent of you would show signs Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,of bone degeneration\Nand cartilage degeneration like this; Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,85 percent of all women by the age of 70 Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,would show moderate to severe\Ncartilage degeneration; Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,50 to 60 percent of the men in\Nthis audience would also have such signs. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So this is a very common disease. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Well, the second perk of being a physician Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,is that you can get to experiment\Non your own ailments. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So about 10 years ago we began, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,we brought this process\Ninto the laboratory, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and we began to do simple experiments, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,mechanically trying\Nto fix this degeneration. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,We tried to inject chemicals\Ninto the knee spaces of animals Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,to try to reverse cartilage degeneration, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and to put a short summary\Non a very long and painful process, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,essentially it came to naught. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Nothing happened. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And then about seven years ago,\Nwe had a research student from Australia. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Now, the nice thing about Australians\Nis that they're habitually used Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,to looking at the world upside down,\Nand so -- (Laughter) -- Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Dan suggested to me, "You know,\Nmaybe it isn't a mechanical problem. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Maybe it isn't a chemical problem.\NMaybe it's a stem cell problem." Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,In other words, he had two hypotheses. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Number one, there is such a thing\Nas a skeletal stem cell Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,that builds up the entire\Nvertebrate skeleton: Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,bone, cartilage,\Nand the fibrous elements of skeleton, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,just like there's a stem cell in blood, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,just like there's a stem cell\Nin the nervous system, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and two, that maybe that, the degeneration\Nor dysfunction of this stem cell Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,that is causing osteochondral arthritis,\Na very common ailment. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So really the question was,\Nwere we looking for a pill Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,when we should have really\Nbeen looking for a cell. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So we switched our models, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and now we began to look\Nfor skeletal stem cells, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and to cut again a long story short, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,about five years ago,\Nwe found these cells. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,They live inside the skeleton. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Here's a schematic and then\Na real photograph of one of them. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,The white stuff is bone, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and these red columns that you see\Nand the yellow cells Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,are cells that have arisen\Nfrom one single skeleton stem cell, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,columns of cartilage, columns of bone\Ncoming out a single cell. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,These cells are fascinating.\NThey have four properties. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Number one is that they live\Nwhere they're expected to live. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,They live just underneath\Nthe surface of the bone, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,underneath cartilage. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You know, in biology,\Nit's location, location, location, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and they move into the appropriate areas\Nand form bone and cartilage. That's one. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Here's an interesting property. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You can take them out\Nof the vertebrate skeleton, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,you can culture them\Nin petri dishes in the laboratory, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and they are dying to form cartilage. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Remember how we couldn't\Nform cartilage for love or money? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,These cells are dying to form cartilage. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,They form their own furls\Nof cartilage around themselves. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,They're also, number three,\Nthe most efficient repairers Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,of fractures that we've ever encountered. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,This is a little bone, a mouse bone\Nthat we fractured Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and then let it heal by itself. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,These stem cells have come in\Nand repaired, in yellow, the bone, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in white, the cartilage,\Nalmost completely, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,so much so that if you label them\Nwith a fluorescent dye Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,you can see them like some kind of\Npeculiar cellular glue Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,coming into the area of a fracture,\Nfixing it locally, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and then stopping their work. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Now, the fourth one is the most ominous, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and that is that their numbers\Ndecline precipitously, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,precipitously, tenfold,\Nfiftyfold, as you age. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And so what had happened, really,\Nis that we found ourselves Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in perceptual shift. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,We had gone hunting for pills Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,but we ended up finding theories, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and in some ways, we had hooked ourselves\Nback onto this idea: Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,cells, organisms, environments, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,because we were now thinking\Nabout bone stem cells, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,we were thinking about arthritis\Nin terms of a cellular disease. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And then the next question was,\Nare there organs? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Can you build this as an organ\Noutside the body? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Can you implant cartilage\Ninto areas of trauma? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And perhaps most interestingly, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,can you ascend right up\Nand create environments? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You know, we know\Nthat exercise remodels bone, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,but come on, none of us\Nis going to exercise. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So could you imagine ways of passively\Nloading and unloading bone Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,so that you can recreate\Nor regenerate catilage? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And perhaps more interesting,\Nand more importantly, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,the question is, can you apply this model\Nmore globally outside medicine? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,What's at stake, as I said before,\Nis not killing something, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,but growing something. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And it raises a series of, I think,\Nsome of the most interesting questions Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,about how we think\Nabout medicine in the future. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Could your medicine be a cell\Nand not a pill? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,How would we grow these cells? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,What we would we do to stop\Nthe malignant growth of these cells? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,We heard about the problems\Nof unleashing growth. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Would we have to implant\Nsuicide genes into these cells Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,to stop them from growing? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Could your medicine be an organ\Nthat's created outside the body Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and then implanted into the body? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Could that stop some of the degeneration? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,What if the organ needed to have memory? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,In cases of diseases of the nervous system\Nsome of those organs had memory. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,How could we implant\Nthose memories back in? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Could we store these organs? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Could each organ have to be developed\Nfor an individual human being Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and put back? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,And perhaps most puzzlingly, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,could your medicine be an environment? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Could you patent an environment? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,In every culture, shamans have been\Nusing environments as medicines. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Could we imagine that for our future? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,I've talked a lot about models.\NI began this talk with models. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So let me end with some thoughts\Nabout model building. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,That's what we do as scientists. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You know, when an architect\Nbuilds a model, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,he or she is trying to show you\Na world in miniature. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,But when a scientist is building a model, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,he or she is trying to show you\Nthe world in metaphor. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,He or she is trying to create\Na new way of seeing. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,The former is a scale shift.\NThe latter is a perceptual shift. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Now, antibiotics created\Nsuch a perceptual shift Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in our way of thinking about medicine\Nthat it really colored, distorted, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,very successfully, the way we've thought\Nabout medicine for the last hundred years. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,But we need new models\Nto think about medicine in the future. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,That's what's at stake. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You know, there's\Na popular trope out there Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,that the reason we haven't had\Nthe transformative impact Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,on the treatment of illness Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,is because we don't have\Npowerful enough drugs, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and that's partly true, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,but perhaps the real reason is\Nthat we don't have powerful enough Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,ways of thinking about medicines. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,It's certainly true that Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,it would be lovely to have new medicines, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,but perhaps what's really at stake\Nare three more intangible ends: Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,mechanisms, models, metaphors. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Thank you. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,(Applause) Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Chris Anderson: I really\Nlike this metaphor. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,How does it link in?\NThere's a lot of talk Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,in technologyland about\Nthe personalization of medicine, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,that we have all this data\Nand that medical treatments of the future Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,will be for you specifically,\Nyour genome, your current context. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Does that apply to this model\Nyou've got here? Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Siddhartha Mukherjee: It's\Na very interesting question. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,You know, we've thought\Nabout personalization of medicine Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,very much in terms of genomics. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,That's because the gene\Nis such a dominant metaphor, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,again, to use that same word,\Nin medicine today, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,that we think the genome will drive\Nthe personalization of medicine. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,But of course the genome\Nis just the bottom Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,of a long chain of being, as it were. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,That chain of being, really the first\Norganized unit of that, is the cell. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So, if we are really going to deliver\Nin medicine in this way, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,we have to think of personalizing\Ncellular therapies, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and then personalizing\Norgan or organismal therapies, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and ultimately personalizing\Nemersion therapies for the environment. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,So I think at every stage, you know, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,there's that metaphor,\Nthere's turtles all the way. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,Well, in this, there's\Npersonalization all the way. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,CA: So when you say\Nmedicine could be a cell Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,and not a pill, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,I mean, you're talking about\Npotentially your own cells. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,SM: Absolutely.\NCA: So converted to stem cells, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,perhaps tested against all kinds\Nof drugs or something, and prepared. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,SM: And there's no perhaps.\NThis is what we're doing. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,This is what's happening, and in fact,\Nwe're slowly moving, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,not away from genomics,\Nbut incorporating genomics Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,into what we call multi-order,\Nsemi-autonomous, self-regulating systems, Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,like cells, like organs,\Nlike environments. Dialogue: 0,9:59:59.99,9:59:59.99,Default,,0000,0000,0000,,CA: Thank you so much.\NSM: Thank you.