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How parasites change their host's behavior - Jaap de Roode

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    Which of these entities
    has evolved the ability
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    to manipulate an animal
    many times its size?
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    The answer is all of them.
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    These are all parasites,
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    organisms that live on
    or inside another host organism,
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    which they harm and sometimes even kill.
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    Parasite survival depends on transmitting
    from one host to the next,
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    sometimes through
    an intermediate species.
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    Our parasites elegantly achieve this
    by manipulating their host's behavior,
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    sometimes through direct brain hijacking.
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    For example, this is the Gordian worm.
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    One of its hosts, this cricket.
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    The Gordian worm needs water to mate,
    but the cricket prefers dry land.
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    So once it's big enough to reproduce,
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    the worm produces proteins that garble
    the cricket's navigational system.
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    The confused cricket
    jumps around erratically,
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    moves closer to water,
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    and eventually leaps in,
    often drowning in the process.
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    The worm then wriggles out to mate
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    and its eggs get eaten
    by little water insects
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    that mature,
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    colonize land,
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    and are in turn, eaten by new crickets.
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    And thus, the Gordian worm lives on.
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    And here's the rabies virus,
    another mind altering parasite.
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    This virus infects mammals, often dogs,
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    and travels up the animal's
    nerves to its brain
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    where it causes inflammation
    that eventually kills the host.
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    But before it does, it often increases
    its host's aggressiveness
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    and ramps up the production
    of rabies transmitting saliva,
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    while making it hard to swollow.
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    These factors make the host
    more likely to bite another animal
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    and more likely to pass
    the virus on when it does.
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    And now, meet Ophiocordyceps,
    also known as the zombie fungus.
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    Its host of choice is tropical ants
    that normally live in tree tops.
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    After Ophiocordyceps spores
    pierce the ant's exoskeleton,
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    they set off convulsions
    that make the ant fall from the tree.
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    The fungus changes the ant's behavior,
    compelling it to wander mindlessly
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    until it stumbles onto a plant leaf with
    the perfect fungal breeding conditions,
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    which it latches onto.
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    The ant then dies,
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    and the fungus parasitizes its body
    to build a tall, thin stalk from its neck.
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    Within several weeks,
    the stalk shoots of spores,
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    which turn more ants
    into six-legged leaf-seeking zombies.
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    One of humanity's most deadly assaliants
    is behavior-altering parasite,
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    though if it's any consolation,
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    it's not our brains
    that are being hijacked.
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    I'm talking about Plasmodium,
    which causes malaria.
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    This parasite needs to mosquitoes
    to shuttle it between hosts,
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    so it makes them bite more frequently
    and for longer.
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    There's also evidence
    that humans infected with malaria
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    are more attractive to mosquitoes,
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    which will bite them
    and transfer the parasite further.
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    This multi-species system is so effective,
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    that there are hundreds of millions
    of malaria cases every year.
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    And finally, there are cats.
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    Don't worry.
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    There probably aren't any cats
    living in your body
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    and controlling your thoughts.
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    I mean, probably.
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    But there is a microorganism
    called Toxoplasma
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    that needs both cats and rodents
    to complete its life cycle.
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    When a rat gets infected
    by eating cat feces,
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    the parasite changes chemical levels
    in the rat's brain,
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    making it less cautious
    around the hungry felines,
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    maybe even attracted to them.
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    This makes them easy prey,
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    so these infected rodents
    get eaten and pass the parasite on.
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    Mind control successful.
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    There's even evidence that the parasite
    affects human behavior.
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    In most cases,
    we don't completely understand
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    how these parasites manage
    their feats of behavior modification.
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    But from what we do know,
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    we can tell that they have
    a pretty diverse toolbox.
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    Gordian worms seem to affect
    crickets' brains directly.
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    The malaria parasite, on the other hand,
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    blocks an enzyme
    that helps the mosquitoes feed,
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    forcing them to bite over
    and over and over again.
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    The rabies virus may cause
    that snarling, slobbering behavior
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    by putting the immune system
    into overdrive.
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    But whatever the method,
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    when you think about how effectively
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    these parasites control
    the behavior of their hosts,
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    you may wonder how much of human behavior
    is actually parasites doing the talking?
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    Since more than half of the species
    on Earth are parasites,
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    it could be more than you think.
Title:
How parasites change their host's behavior - Jaap de Roode
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:14

English subtitles

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