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I'm an ocean microbiologist
at the University of Tennessee,
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and I want to tell you guys
about some microbes
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that are so strange and wonderful
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that they're challenging our assumptions
about what life is like on Earth.
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So I have a question.
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Please raise your hand if you've ever
thought it would be cool
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to go to the bottom
of the ocean in a submarine?
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Yes.
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Most of you, because
the oceans are so cool.
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Alright, now, please raise your hand
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if the reason you raised your hand
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to go to the bottom
of the ocean in the submarine
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is because it would get you
a little bit closer
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to that exciting mud that's down there.
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Nobody.
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I'm the only one in this room.
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Well, I think about this all the time.
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I spend most of my waking hours
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trying to determine
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how deep we can go into the Earth
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and still find something,
anything, that's alive,
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because we still don't know
the answer to this very basic question
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about life on Earth.
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So in the 1980s, a scientist
named John Parks in the UK
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was similarly obsessed,
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and he came up with a crazy idea.
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He believed that there was a vast,
deep, and living microbial biosphere
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underneath all the world's oceans
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that extends hundreds
of meters into the seafloor,
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which is cool,
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but the only problem
is that nobody believed him,
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and the reason that nobody believed him
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is that ocean sediments may be
the most boring place on Earth.
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There's no sunlight, there's no oxygen,
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and perhaps worst of all,
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there's no fresh food deliveries
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for literally millions of years.
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You don't have to have a PhD in biology
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to know that that is a bad place
to go looking for life.
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But in 2002, John had convinced
enough people that he was on to something
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that he actually got an expedition
on this drill ship
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called the Joides Resolution,
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and he ran it along with
Bo Barker Jørgensen of Denmark.
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And so they were finally able to get
some really good pristine
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deep sub-surface samples
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without contamination
from surface microbes.
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This drill ship is capable of drilling
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thousands of meters underneath the ocean,
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and the mud comes up in sequential cores,
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one after the other, long,
long cores that look like this.
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This is being carried by scientists
such as myself who go on these ships,
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and we process the cores on the ships
and then we send them home
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to our home laboratories
for further study.
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So when John and his colleagues
got these first precious
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deep sea pristine samples,
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they put them under the microscope,
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and they saw images that looked
pretty much like this,
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which is actually taken
from a more recent expedition
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by my PhD student Joy Buongiorno.
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You can see the hazy stuff
in the background.
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That's mud. That's deep sea ocean mud,
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and the bright green dots
stained with the green fluorescent dye
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are real, living microbes.
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Now I've got to tell you all something
really tragic about microbes.
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They all look the same under a microbe,
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I mean, to a first approximation.
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You can take the most fascinating
organisms in the world,
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like a microbe that literally
breathes uranium,
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and another one that makes rocket fuel,
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mix them up with some ocean mud,
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put them underneath a microscope,
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and they're just little dots.
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It's really annoying.
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So we can't use their looks
to tell them apart.
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We have to use DNA like a fingerprint
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to say who is who.
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And I'll teach you guys
how to do it right now.
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So I made up some data, and I'm going
to show you some data that are not real.
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This is to illustrate
what it would look like
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if a bunch of species were not
related to each other at all.
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So you can see each species
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has a list of combinations
of A, G, C, and T,
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which are the four sub-units of DNA,
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sort of randomly jumbled
and nothing looks like anything else
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and these species are totally
unrelated to each other.
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But this is what real DNA looks like
from a gene that these species
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happen to share.
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Everything lines up nearly perfectly.
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The chances of getting
so many of those vertical columns
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where every species has a C
or every species has a T
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by random chance is infinitesimal.
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So we know that all those species
had to have had a common ancestor.
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They're all relatives of each other.
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So now I'll tell you who they are.
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The top two are us and chimpanzees,
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which y'all already knew were related,
because, I mean, obviously,
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but we're also related to things
that we don't look like,
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like pine trees and giardia,
which is that gastrointestinal disease
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you can get if you don't filter
your water while you're hiking.
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We're also related to bacteria like e.coli
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and Clostridium difficile, which is
a horrible, opportunistic pathogen
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that kills lots of people.
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But there's of course good microbes here,
like Dehalococcoides ethenogenes,
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which cleans up
our industrial waste for us.
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So if I take these DNA sequences,
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and then I use them, the similarities
and differences between them,
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to make a family tree for all of us
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so you can see who is closely related,
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then this is what it looks like.
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So you can see clearly at a glance
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that things like us and giardia
and bunnies and pine trees
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are all, like, siblings,
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and then the bacteria are,
like, our ancient cousins.
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But we're kin to every
living thing on Earth.
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So in my job, on a daily basis,
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I get to produce scientific evidence
against existential loneliness.
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So when we got these first DNA sequences
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from the first crews of pristine samples
from the deep subsurface,
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we wanted to know where they were.
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So the first thing that we discovered
is that they were not aliens,
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because we could get their DNA to line up
with everything else on Earth.
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But now check out where they go
on our tree of life.
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The first thing you'll notice
is that there's a lot of them.
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It wasn't just one little species that
managed to live in this horrible place.
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It's kind of a lot of things.
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And the second thing that you'll notice,
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hopefully, is that they're not
like anything we've ever seen before.
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They are as different from each other
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as they are from anything
that we've known before
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as we are from pine trees.
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So John Parks was completely correct.
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He, and we, had discovered
a completely new and highly diverse
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microbial ecosystem on Earth
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that no one even knew existed
before the 1980s.
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So now we were on a roll.
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The next step was to grow
these exotic species
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in a petri dish so that we could
do real experiments on them
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like microbiologists are supposed to do.
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But no matter what we fed them,
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they refused to grow.
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Even now, 15 years
and many expeditions later,
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no human has ever gotten a single one
of these exotic deep subsurface microbes
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to grow in a petri dish.
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And it's not for lack of trying.
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That may sound disappointing,
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but I actually find it exhilarating,
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because it means there are so many
tantalizing unknowns to work on.
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Like, for instance, my colleagues
and I got what we thought
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was a really great idea.
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We were going to read their genes
like a recipe book,
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find out what it was they wanted to eat,
and put it in their petri dishes,
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and then they would grow and be happy.
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but then when we looked at their genes,
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it turns out that what they wanted to eat
was the food we were already feeding them.
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So that was a total wash.
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There was something else
that they wanted in their petri dishes
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that we were just not giving them.
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So by combining measurements
from many different places
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around the world,
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my colleagues at the University
of Southern California,
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Doug LaRowe and Jan Amend,
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were able to calculate that each one
of these deep sea microbial cells
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requires only one zeptowatt of power,
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and before you get your phones out,
a zepto is 10 to the minus 21,
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because I know I would want
to look that up.
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Humans, on the other hand,
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require about a hundred watts of power.
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So a hundred watts is basically
if you take a pineapple
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and drop it from about waist height
to the ground 881,632 times a day.
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If you did that and then
linked it up to a turbine,
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that would create enough power
to make me happen for a day.
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A zeptowatt, if you put it
in similar terms,
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is if you take just one grain of salt
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and then you imagine
a tiny, tiny, little ball
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that is one thousandth of the mass
of that one grain of salt
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and then you drop it one nanometer,
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which is a hundred times smaller
than the wavelength of visible light,
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once per day.
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That's all it takes to make
these microbes live.
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That's less energy than we ever thought
would be capable of supporting life,
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but somehow, amazingly, beautifully,
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it's enough.
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So if these deep subsurface microbes
have a very different relationship
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with energy than we previously thought,
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then it follows that they'll have to have
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a different relationship
with time as well,
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because when you live
on such tiny energy gradients,
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rapid growth is impossible.
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If these things ever wanted
to colonize our throats and make us sick,
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they would get muscled out
by fast-growing streptococcus
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before they could even
initiate cell division.
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So that's why we never
find them in our throats.
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Perhaps the fact that the deep
subsurface is so boring
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is actually an asset to these microbes.
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They never get washed out by a storm.
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They never get overgrown by weeds.
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All they have to do is exist.
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Maybe that thing that we were missing
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in our petri dishes was not food at all.
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Maybe it wasn't a chemical.
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Maybe the thing that they really want,
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the nutrient that they want, is time.
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But time is the one thing
that I'll never be able to give them.
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So even if I have a cell culture
that I pass to my PhD students,
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who pass it to their
PhD students, and so on,
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we'd have to do that
for thousands of years
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in order to mimic the exact conditions
of the deep subsurface,
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all without growing any contaminants.
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It's just not possible.
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But maybe in a way we already have
grown them in our petri dishes.
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Maybe they looked at all that food
that we offered them and said,
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thanks, I'm going to speed up so much
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that I'm going to make
a new cell next century.
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Ugh.
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(Laughter)
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So why is it that the rest
of biology moves so fast?
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Why does a cell die after a day
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and a human dies after
only a hundred years?
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These seem like really
arbitrarily short limits
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when you think about the total
amount of time in the universe.
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But these are not arbitrary limits.
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They're dictated by one simple thing,
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and that thing is the Sun.
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Once life figured out how to harness
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the energy of the Sun
through photosynthesis,
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we all had to speed up and get
on day and night cycles.
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In that way, the Sun gave us
both a reason to be fast
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and the fuel to do it.
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You can view most of life on Earth
like a circulatory system,
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and the Sun is our beating heart.
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But the deep subsurface
is like a circulatory system
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that's completely
disconnected from the Sun.
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It's instead being driven
by long, slow geological rhythms.
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There's currently no theoretical limit
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on the lifespan of one single cell.
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As long as there is at least
a tiny energy gradient to exploit,
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theoretically, a single cell could live
for hundreds of thousands of years
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or more, simply by replacing
broken parts over time.
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To ask a microbe that lives like that
to grow in our petri dishes
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is to ask them to adapt to our frenetic,
Sun-centric, fast way of living,
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and maybe they've got
better things to do than that.
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(Laughter)
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Imagine if we could figure out
how they managed to do this.
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What if it involves some cool,
ultra-stable compounds
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that we could use
to increase the shelf life
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in biomedical or industrial applications?
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Or maybe if we figure out
the mechanism that they use
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to grow so extraordinarily slowly,
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we could mimic it in cancer cells
and slow runaway cell division.
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I don't know.
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I mean, honestly, that is all speculation,
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but the only thing I know for certain
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is that there are a hundred
billion billion billlion
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living microbial cells underlying
all the world's oceans.
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That's 200 times more than the total
biomass of humans on this planet.
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And those microbes have
a fundamentally different relationship
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with time and energy than we do.
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What seems like a day to them
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might be a thousand years to us.
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They don't care about the Sun,
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and they don't care about growing fast,
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and they probably don't give
a damn about my petri dishes,
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but if we can continue to find
creative ways to study them,
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then maybe we'll finally figure out
what life, all of life, is like on Earth.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
Natsuhiko Mizutani
2:25 - should be "So when [Steven] and his colleagues"
following the correction at 1:43 "But in 2002, [Steven D'Hondt] had convinced enough people"