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You don't know them.
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You don't see them.
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But they're always around,
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whispering,
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making secret plans,
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building armies with millions of soldiers.
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And when they decide to attack,
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they all attack at the same time.
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I'm talking about bacteria.
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(Laughter)
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Who did you think I was talking about?
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Bacteria live in communities
just like humans.
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They have families,
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they talk
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and they plan their activities.
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And just like humans,
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they trick, deceive and some might
even cheat on each other.
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What if I tell you that we can listen
to bacterial conversations
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and translate their confidential
information into human language?
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And what if I tell you that translating
bacterial conversations can save lives?
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I hold a PhD in nanophysics,
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and I've used nanotechnology
to develop a real-time translation tool
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that can spy on bacterial communities
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and give us recordings of what
bacteria are up to.
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Bacteria live everywhere:
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they're in the soil,
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on our furniture
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and inside our bodies.
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In fact 90 percent of all of life's cells
in this theatre are bacterial.
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Some bacteria are good for us:
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they help us digest food
or produce antibiotics.
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And some bacteria are bad for us:
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they cause diseases and death.
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To coordinate all the functions
bacteria have,
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they have to be able to organize,
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and they do that just like us humans --
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by communicaiting.
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But instead of using words,
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they use signaling
molecules with each other.
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When bacteria are few,
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the signaling molecules just flow away.
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Like the screams of a man
alone in the desert.
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But when their are many bacteria,
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the signaling molecules accumulate,
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and the bacteria start sensing
that they're not alone.
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They listen to each other.
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In this way, they keep track
of how many they are
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and when they're many enough
to iniate a new action.
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And when the signaling molecules
have reached a certain threshold,
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all the bacteria sense at once
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that they need to act
with the same action.
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So bacterial conversation consists
of an initiative and a reaction.
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A production of a molecule
and the response to it.
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In my research I focused on spying
on bacterial communities
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inside the human body.
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How does it work?
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We have a sample from a patient.
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It could be a blood or spit sample.
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We shoot electrons into the sample,
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the electrons will interact with any
communication molecules present,
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and this interaction
will give us information
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on the identity of the bacteria,
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the type of communication
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and how much the bacteria are talking.
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But what is it like
when bacteria communicate?
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Before I developed the translation tool,
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my first assumption