Not All Mammoths Were Woolly: Hendrik Poinar at TEDxDeExtinction
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0:03 - 0:05When I was a young boy,
-
0:05 - 0:08I used to gaze
through the microscope of my father -
0:08 - 0:12at the insects in amber
that he kept in the house. -
0:12 - 0:16And they were remarkably well preserved,
morphologically just phenomenal. -
0:16 - 0:20And we used to imagine that someday
they would actually come to life, -
0:20 - 0:24and they would crawl out of the resin,
and if they could, they would fly away. -
0:25 - 0:28If you would ask me ten years ago
wether or not we would ever be able -
0:28 - 0:31to actually sequence
the genome of extinct animals -
0:31 - 0:33I would have told you:
Meh, it is unlikely. -
0:33 - 0:35If you would ask wether or not
we would be able -
0:35 - 0:39to revive an extinct species,
I would have said, pipe dream. -
0:39 - 0:42But I'm actually standing here today,
amazingly, to tell you -
0:42 - 0:46that not only are the sequencing
of extinct genomes a possibility, -
0:46 - 0:48are actually a modern day reality,
-
0:48 - 0:52but the revival of an extinct species
are actually within reach. -
0:52 - 0:54Maybe not from the insects in amber.
-
0:54 - 0:58In fact, this mosquito was actually used
for the inspiration for Jurassic Park, -
0:58 - 1:00but from woolly mammoths,
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1:00 - 1:03the well preserved remains
of woolly mammoths in the permafrost. -
1:03 - 1:07Woollies are a particularly interesting
quintessencial image of the Ice Age. -
1:07 - 1:10They were large, they were hairy,
they had large tusks, -
1:10 - 1:14and we seem to have a very deep connection
with them, like we do with elephants. -
1:14 - 1:18Maybe it's because elephants
share many things in common with us. -
1:18 - 1:21They bury their dead,
they educate the next of kin, -
1:21 - 1:24they have social knits
that are very close, -
1:24 - 1:27or maybe it's actually because
we are bound by deep time, -
1:27 - 1:30because elephants, like us,
share their origins in Africa -
1:30 - 1:33some seven million years ago.
-
1:33 - 1:36And as habitats changed
and environments changed, -
1:36 - 1:41we actually, like the elephants,
migrated out into Europe and Asia. -
1:42 - 1:44So the first large mammoth
that appears on the scene -
1:44 - 1:50is meridionalis, which was standing
four meters tall, weighing about 10 tons. -
1:50 - 1:54And was a woodland-adapted species
and spread from Western Europe -
1:54 - 1:57clear across central Asia,
across the Bering land bridge -
1:57 - 2:00and into parts of North America.
-
2:00 - 2:02And then again, as climate changed
as it always does, -
2:02 - 2:04and new habitats opened up,
-
2:04 - 2:07we had the arrival
of a steppe-adapted species, -
2:07 - 2:09called trogontherii in Central Asia,
-
2:09 - 2:11pushing meridionalis
out into Western Europe. -
2:11 - 2:14And the open grassland savannas
of North America opened up -
2:14 - 2:19leading to the Columbian mammoth,
a large hairless species in North America. -
2:19 - 2:22It was really only
about 500,000 years later -
2:22 - 2:26that we had the arrival of the woolly,
the one that we all know and love so much, -
2:26 - 2:31spreading from an east Beringian
point of origin across Central Asia, -
2:31 - 2:35again pushing the trogontherii
out through Central Europe, -
2:35 - 2:38and over hundreds of thousands of years
migrating back and forth -
2:38 - 2:41across the Bering land bridge,
during times of glacial peaks, -
2:41 - 2:45and coming into direct contact
with the Columbian ancestors, -
2:45 - 2:47relatives living in the south.
-
2:47 - 2:51And there, they survived
over hundreds of thousands of years -
2:51 - 2:53during traumatic climatic shifts.
-
2:53 - 2:55So that is a highly plastic animal
-
2:55 - 2:58dealing with great transitions
in temperature and environment -
2:58 - 3:00and doing very very well.
-
3:00 - 3:04And there they survived on the mainland
until about 10,000 years ago, -
3:04 - 3:07and actually surprisingly
on the small islands -
3:07 - 3:10off of Siberia and Alaska
till about 3,000 years ago. -
3:10 - 3:14So Egyptians are building pyramids
and Woollies are still living on islands. -
3:15 - 3:16And then, they disappear,
-
3:16 - 3:20like 99% of all the animals
that once lived, they go extinct, -
3:20 - 3:22likely due to a warming climate
-
3:22 - 3:25and fast-encroaching dense forests
that are migrating north -
3:25 - 3:28and also, as the late, great
Paul Martin once put it: -
3:28 - 3:30Probably pleistocene overkill,
-
3:30 - 3:33so the large game hunters
that took them down. -
3:33 - 3:35Fortunately, we find millions
of their remains, -
3:35 - 3:39strewn across the permafrost,
buried deep in Siberia and Alaska. -
3:39 - 3:43We can actually go up there
and actually take them out. -
3:43 - 3:47And the preservation is again,
like those insects in [amber], phenomenal. -
3:47 - 3:51So you have teeth, bones with blood,
which looked like blood. -
3:51 - 3:54You have hair, and you have
intact carcasses or heads -
3:54 - 3:57which still have brains in them.
-
3:57 - 4:00So the preservation of the survival of DNA
depends on many factors -
4:00 - 4:04and I have to admit most of which
we still don't quite understand, -
4:04 - 4:08but depending upon when an organism dies
and how quickly he is buried, -
4:08 - 4:10the depth of that burial,
-
4:10 - 4:13the constancy of the temperature
of that burial environment -
4:13 - 4:16will ultimately dictate
how long DNA will survive -
4:16 - 4:19over geologically meaningful time frames.
-
4:19 - 4:22And it's probably surprising
to many of you sitting in this room -
4:22 - 4:25that it's not the time that matters,
it's not the length of preservation, -
4:25 - 4:30it's the consistency of the temperature
of that preservation that matters most. -
4:30 - 4:33So if we were to go deep now
within the bones and the teeth -
4:33 - 4:36that actually survived
the fossilization process -
4:36 - 4:40the DNA which was once intact
tightly wrapped around histone proteins -
4:40 - 4:42is now under attack by the bacteria
-
4:42 - 4:45that lives symbiotically with the mammoth
for years during its lifetime. -
4:45 - 4:49So those bacteria
along with the environmental bacteria, -
4:49 - 4:52free water and oxygen,
actually break apart the DNA -
4:52 - 4:56into smaller and smaller DNA fragments
until all you have -
4:56 - 4:59are fragments
that range from 10 base pairs -
4:59 - 5:02to, in the best case scenarios,
a few hundred base pairs in length. -
5:02 - 5:05So most fossils out there
in the fossil record -
5:05 - 5:08are actually completely devoid
of all organic signatures, -
5:08 - 5:10but a few of them
actually have DNA fragments -
5:10 - 5:15that survived for thousands,
even a few millions of years in time. -
5:16 - 5:18And using state-of-the-art
clean room technology -
5:18 - 5:20we've devized ways that we can actually
-
5:20 - 5:23pull these DNAs away
from all the rest of the gunk in there. -
5:23 - 5:26And it's not surprising
to any of you sitting in the room -
5:26 - 5:28that if I take a mammoth bone or a tooth
-
5:28 - 5:30and I extract its DNA
that I will get mammoth DNA. -
5:30 - 5:34But I'll also get all the bacteria
that once lived with the mammoth -
5:34 - 5:39and more complicated, I'll get all the DNA
that survived in that environment with it. -
5:39 - 5:42So the bacteria, the fungi,
and so on and so forth. -
5:42 - 5:46So, not surprising then again
that a mammoth preserved in the permafrost -
5:46 - 5:50will have something on the order
of 50% of its DNA being mammoth, -
5:50 - 5:52where something
like the Columbian mammoth, -
5:52 - 5:54buried in a temperate environment
over its laying-in -
5:54 - 5:58will only have 3% to 10% endogenous.
-
5:58 - 6:02But we've come up with very clever ways
that we can actually discriminate, -
6:02 - 6:05capture and discriminate the mammoth
from the non-mammooth DNA. -
6:05 - 6:07And with the advances
in high-troughput sequencing -
6:07 - 6:11we can actually pull out
and bioinformatically re-jig -
6:11 - 6:13all these small mammoth fragments
-
6:13 - 6:15and place them onto a backbone
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6:15 - 6:18of an Asian or
African elephant chromosome. -
6:18 - 6:21And so, by doing that,
we can actually get all the little points -
6:21 - 6:24that discriminate between a mammoth
and an Asian elephant -
6:24 - 6:27and what do we know, then,
about the mammoth? -
6:27 - 6:30Well, the mammoth genome
is almost at full completion -
6:31 - 6:34and we know that it's actually really big,
it's mammoth. -
6:34 - 6:37So a hominid genome
is about three billion base pairs, -
6:37 - 6:40but an elephant and mammoth genome
is about two billion base pairs larger, -
6:40 - 6:44and most of that is composed
of small repetitive DNAs -
6:44 - 6:49that make it very difficult to actually
re-jig the entire structure of the genome. -
6:49 - 6:51So, having this information
allows us to answer -
6:51 - 6:53one of the interesting
relationship questions -
6:53 - 6:55between mammoths
and their living relatives, -
6:55 - 6:57the African and the Asian elephant,
-
6:57 - 7:00all of which shared an ancestor
seven million years ago, -
7:00 - 7:05but the genome of the mammoth shows it
to share a most recent common ancestor -
7:05 - 7:07with Asian elephants
about six million years ago, -
7:07 - 7:09so slightly closer to the Asian elephant.
-
7:10 - 7:13With advances in ancient DNA technology
-
7:13 - 7:16we can actually now start
to begin to sequence -
7:16 - 7:19the genomes of those other
extinct mammoth forms that I mentioned. -
7:19 - 7:21And I just wanted to talk
about two of them: -
7:21 - 7:23The woolly and the Columbian mammoth.
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7:23 - 7:27Both of which were living very close
to each other during glacial peaks, -
7:27 - 7:29so when the glaciers
were massive in North America -
7:29 - 7:32the woollies were pushed
into these subglacial ecotones -
7:32 - 7:35and came into contact with their relatives
living to the south. -
7:35 - 7:37And there they shared refugia
-
7:37 - 7:39and a little bit more
than the refugia, it turns out. -
7:39 - 7:42It looks like they were interbreeding.
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7:42 - 7:44And this is not an uncommon feature
in Proboscideans -
7:44 - 7:47because it turns out
that large savanna male elephants -
7:47 - 7:51will outcompete the smaller
forest elephants for their females. -
7:51 - 7:56So, large hairless Columbians,
outcompeting the smaller male woollies. -
7:56 - 7:58It reminds me a bit of high school,
unfortunately. -
7:58 - 8:00(Laughter)
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8:00 - 8:03So, this is not trivial,
-
8:03 - 8:06given the idea that we want
to revive extinct species, -
8:06 - 8:08because it turns out that an African
and an Asian elephant -
8:08 - 8:10can actually interbreed
and have live young -
8:10 - 8:15and this has actually occurred by accident
in a zoo in Chester, UK in 1978. -
8:16 - 8:19So that means we can actually take
Asian elephant chromosomes, -
8:19 - 8:21modify them into all those positions
-
8:21 - 8:24we have actually now been able
to discriminate with the mammoth genome. -
8:24 - 8:27We can put that into an enucleated cell,
-
8:28 - 8:30differentiate that into a stem cell,
-
8:30 - 8:32subsequently differentiate that
maybe into a sperm, -
8:32 - 8:35artificially inseminate
an Asian elephant egg -
8:35 - 8:38and over a long and arduous procedure
-
8:38 - 8:41actually bring back
something that looks like this. -
8:41 - 8:43Now, this would not be an exact replica
-
8:43 - 8:46because the short DNA fragments
that I told you about, -
8:46 - 8:48would prevent us from building
the exact structure. -
8:48 - 8:51But it would make something
that looked and felt -
8:51 - 8:53very much like a woolly mammoth did.
-
8:53 - 8:57And when I bring up this with my friends,
we often talk about: -
8:57 - 9:00well, where would you put it?
Where are you going to house a mammoth? -
9:00 - 9:02There's not climates or habitats suitable.
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9:02 - 9:04Well, that is not actually the case.
-
9:04 - 9:06It turns out that there are
swaths of habitat -
9:06 - 9:10in the north of Siberia and Yukon
that actually could house a mammooth. -
9:10 - 9:12Remember this was a highly plastic animal
-
9:12 - 9:15that lived over tremendous
climate variation. -
9:15 - 9:18So this landscape
would be easily able to house it. -
9:18 - 9:22And I have to admit that there is
a part of the child in me, the boy in me, -
9:22 - 9:24that would love to see
these majestic creatures -
9:24 - 9:27walk across the permafrost
of the north once again. -
9:27 - 9:29But I do have to admit
that part of the adult in me, -
9:29 - 9:32sometimes wonders
wether or not we should. -
9:32 - 9:34Thank you very much.
-
9:34 - 9:36(Applause)
- Title:
- Not All Mammoths Were Woolly: Hendrik Poinar at TEDxDeExtinction
- Description:
-
The molecular evolutionary geneticist and biological anthropologist Hendrik Poinar, shares his research about the possibility of bringing back to life the woolly mammoth, asking at the same time the crucial question: should we do it?
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TEDxTalks
- Duration:
- 09:39
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Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for Not All Mammoths Were Woolly: Hendrik Poinar at TEDxDeExtinction | |
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Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for Not All Mammoths Were Woolly: Hendrik Poinar at TEDxDeExtinction | |
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Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for Not All Mammoths Were Woolly: Hendrik Poinar at TEDxDeExtinction | |
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Ariana Bleau Lugo accepted English subtitles for Not All Mammoths Were Woolly: Hendrik Poinar at TEDxDeExtinction | |
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Ariana Bleau Lugo edited English subtitles for Not All Mammoths Were Woolly: Hendrik Poinar at TEDxDeExtinction | |
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Ariana Bleau Lugo edited English subtitles for Not All Mammoths Were Woolly: Hendrik Poinar at TEDxDeExtinction | |
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Patricia Álvarez edited English subtitles for Not All Mammoths Were Woolly: Hendrik Poinar at TEDxDeExtinction |