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The strange case of the cyclops sheep - Tien Nguyen

  • 0:07 - 0:11
    In the 1950s, a group of ranchers in Idaho
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    were baffled when their sheep gave birth
    to lambs with a singular deformity.
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    Mystified by these cyclops sheep,
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    they called in scientists from the U.S.
    Department of Agriculture to investigate.
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    The researchers hypothesized
    that the pregnant ewes
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    had snacked on poisonous
    birth defect-causing plants.
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    They collected the local flora
    and fed samples to lab rats,
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    but struggled to replicate the effect.
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    So they decided
    to directly observe the sheep
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    with one scientist even living
    with the herd for three summers.
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    After a decade of trial and error,
    the scientists finally found the culprit,
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    wild corn lilies.
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    The lilies contained an active molecule
    with six connected rings
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    that they named cyclopamine
    in reference to the cyclops sheep.
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    They didn't know exactly
    how cyclopamine caused the defect
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    but told ranchers to steer clear.
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    It took about four decades before
    a team of biologists,
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    led by Professor Philip Beachy,
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    stumbled upon the answer.
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    His lab was studying a specific gene
    found in many species,
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    from mice to humans,
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    called the hedgehog gene.
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    It was named by two scientists, who later
    shared the Noble Prize for their work,
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    who found that mutating
    this gene in fruit flies
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    produced pointy spikes like a hedgehog.
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    Beachy and his colleagues performed
    genetic modifications
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    to turn off the hedgehog genes in mice.
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    This resulted in severe defects
    in the development
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    of their brains, organs, and eyes
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    or, rather, eye.
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    Then while perusing a textbook, Beachy
    came across photos of the cyclops sheep
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    and realized what had eluded scientists
    for four decades.
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    Something must have gone awry
    involving the hedgehog gene.
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    Let's take a step back.
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    Genes contain instructions that tell
    cells what to do and when to do it,
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    and they communicate their directives
    using proteins.
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    The hedgehog gene itself tells cells
    to release a so-called hedgehog protein,
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    which kicks off a complex
    series of cellular signals.
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    Here's how it works in normal
    healthy development.
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    Hedgehog protein latches on to
    a protein called patched.
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    That inhibits, or holds, patched back,
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    allowing another protein called
    smoothened to freely signal the cells,
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    telling them where to go
    and what kind of tissues to become.
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    Cyclopamine, say in the form
    of a delicious corn lily,
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    interrupts this pathway
    by binding onto smoothened.
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    That locks smoothened up so that
    it's unable to send the signals
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    needed to mold the brain
    into two hemispheres,
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    and form fingers or separate eyes.
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    So even though the hedgehog
    protein is still doing its job
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    of keeping the way clear for smoothened,
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    cyclopamine blocks smoothened
    from passing along its chemical message.
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    That settled the science
    behind the one-eyed sheep,
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    but Beachy and his team
    caught the glimmer
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    of another more beneficial connection.
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    They noted that uncontrolled activation
    of the smoothened protein
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    was associated with a human syndrome.
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    It's known as Basal Cell Nevus Syndrome,
    and it predisposes people to certain cancers.
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    The scientists proposed
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    putting cyclopamine's smoothened
    binding powers to good use
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    as a treatment for these cancers,
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    as long as the patient wasn't pregnant.
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    Unfortunately, researchers eventually
    found that cyclopamine
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    causes negative side effects,
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    and its chemical properties
    make it difficult to work with.
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    But they did discover that closely
    related molecules are safe and effective,
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    and two of these drugs were approved
    in 2012 and 2015 as skin cancer medicines.
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    When those farmers first saw
    the cyclops sheep,
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    they could have chalked it up to
    a freak genetic mutation and walked away.
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    Instead, their decision to investigate
    turned a mystery into medicine
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    showing that sometimes
    there's more than meets the eye.
Title:
The strange case of the cyclops sheep - Tien Nguyen
Description:

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In the 1950s, a group of ranchers in Idaho were baffled when their sheep gave birth to lambs with only one eye. Mystified by these cyclops sheep, they called in scientists from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to investigate. What happened? Tien Nguyen describes how, decades later, one team of biologists stumbled upon the answer.

Lesson by Tien Nguyen, animation by Anton Bogaty.

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Sarabeth Knobel, Quentin Le Menez, Mattia Veltri, Sammie Goh, Fabian Amels, Ellen Spertus, Sandra Tersluisen, Marcel Trompeter-Petrovic, PnDAA, Jose Fernandez-Calvo, Jack Ta, Steph, Hugo Legorreta, Zhexi Shan, Gustavo Mendoza, Bárbara Nazaré, Josh Engel, Natalia Rico, Andrea Feliz, Olivier Brunel.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:41

English subtitles

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