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5531 lines
175 KiB
5531 lines
175 KiB
WEBVTT
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00:00.000 --> 00:02.000
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You
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00:31.000 --> 00:42.400
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But you can tell if someone's lying, you know, you can sort of feel it in people
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00:43.680 --> 00:48.640
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And I have lied. I'm sure I'll lie again. I don't want to lie. You know, I don't think I'm a liar
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00:48.640 --> 00:54.040
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I try not to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I think it's like really important not to be a liar
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00:54.040 --> 01:04.340
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I'm not sure exactly who he is. His name is JJ Cooey, and I believe he's a consultant for CHD
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01:04.340 --> 01:12.040
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And I believe he has a PhD in some sort of scientific discipline from what I understand
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01:24.040 --> 01:31.040
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I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar.
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01:54.040 --> 02:01.040
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I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar.
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02:24.040 --> 02:38.040
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I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar.
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02:38.040 --> 02:46.040
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I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar.
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02:46.040 --> 02:52.040
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I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar.
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02:52.040 --> 03:08.040
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I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar. I don't want to be a liar.
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03:08.040 --> 03:15.040
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My friend Denver mixed date.
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03:15.040 --> 03:38.600
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I wanted to mix it up a little bit, maybe get some other slides out.
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03:38.600 --> 03:42.520
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We haven't used in a while, I know they're a little more reading.
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03:42.520 --> 03:44.720
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It's a little more reading.
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03:44.720 --> 03:51.520
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It's like we got ourselves some readers in the house.
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03:51.520 --> 04:01.160
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Jimmy Doar made a reference to the reader joke, very, very good Bill Hicks joint, very nice
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04:01.160 --> 04:02.160
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bit.
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04:02.160 --> 04:13.520
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Jimmy, Jimmy Doar showed a lot of courage the other night, I'm giving him another shout-out.
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04:13.520 --> 04:18.120
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It is amazing how many people think they can answer an argument by attributing bad motives
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04:18.120 --> 04:23.320
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to those who disagree with them using this kind of reasoning you can believe or not believe
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04:23.320 --> 04:30.320
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anything about anything without having to bother to deal with facts or logic.
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04:53.320 --> 05:06.920
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It's amazing how many people think they can believe or not believe it or not believe it
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05:06.920 --> 05:34.280
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or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe
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05:34.280 --> 05:36.880
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it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe
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05:36.880 --> 05:43.880
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it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe
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05:43.880 --> 05:50.880
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it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe
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05:50.880 --> 05:57.880
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it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe
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05:57.880 --> 06:04.880
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it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe
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06:04.880 --> 06:09.880
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it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not
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06:09.880 --> 06:16.880
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believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not
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06:16.880 --> 06:22.880
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believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it
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06:22.880 --> 06:28.880
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or not believe it or not believe it Or not believe it or not believe it or not believe it
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06:28.880 --> 06:33.520
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Oh, that was a bad wolf.
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06:33.520 --> 06:34.520
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That went wrong.
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Sorry about that.
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06:35.520 --> 06:37.440
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We're just going to go through that one.
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06:37.440 --> 06:41.440
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That was an old slide that didn't need to go that fast, but that's okay.
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06:41.440 --> 06:43.560
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The stupor is definitely real.
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06:43.560 --> 06:45.440
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Brick soup is for lunch.
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06:45.440 --> 06:48.920
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No soup for you there, Mr. Mark.
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06:48.920 --> 06:54.760
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You had a really good show yesterday reading some kind of document that I actually never
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06:54.760 --> 06:58.800
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had any faith would actually exist, but you can still learn that biology thanks to
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06:58.800 --> 07:05.400
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Mark digging up some of these old descriptions of how early vaccine and let's let's call
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them what they were.
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07:06.400 --> 07:08.040
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They were, they were variolations.
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07:08.040 --> 07:11.320
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They were variolation preparation.
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07:11.320 --> 07:16.840
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But this is how they addressed smallpox back then and I think we are just up against
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07:16.840 --> 07:23.720
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one of the most demonic illusions that has ever been perpetrated on humankind.
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07:23.720 --> 07:27.400
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Very nicely done here in this graphic.
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07:27.400 --> 07:32.000
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Don't forget that they danced, don't forget that they kept people who had been married
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for 50 years apart in their last days.
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07:35.120 --> 07:40.480
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Don't forget that they, what they did to us, don't forget, you got to understand what
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this is about.
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07:41.480 --> 07:51.640
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This is a battle, you know, it's a battle between good and evil and yeah, we are trying
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07:51.640 --> 07:59.800
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to put forth some argument about biology, but even this cartoon might be largely a cartoon
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07:59.800 --> 08:02.720
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imposed upon us by them.
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08:02.720 --> 08:09.640
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Most of our understanding is dependent on their, on the very science that they have funded
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08:09.640 --> 08:13.240
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and put in front of us and this illusion is just, you know, it's something that we've
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08:13.240 --> 08:15.960
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really got to break through for our children.
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08:15.960 --> 08:17.760
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There are people who are learning biology.
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There are people who knew better and we've got to isolate those people who knew better
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and make sure that they, they don't rob us at the last little hope that is available.
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08:28.320 --> 08:29.640
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And that is in our history.
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08:29.640 --> 08:35.280
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It's our recent history and our more distant history and the people that are involved in
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it, what they did, what they said, what they wrote, what they thought.
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08:38.600 --> 08:44.280
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Those ideas are still the trap within which we find ourselves and the people that wove
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that trap and are involved in maintaining it are the people we need to identify.
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08:50.080 --> 08:54.680
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I don't think if you watch television or skillfully use social media, you're going
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to identify any of the people that matter.
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08:59.040 --> 09:03.840
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Even when paintings like this exist, you're still not quite seeing, you're seeing still
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09:03.840 --> 09:06.640
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what they want you to see.
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09:06.640 --> 09:11.160
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And only in a place where your tongues are completely free are we really free and in
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this day and age when a room like this could exist, where Twitter could be an illusion
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09:18.080 --> 09:24.280
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that is entirely created by rooms like this all around the world.
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09:24.280 --> 09:26.320
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We've got to keep swinging, ladies and gentlemen.
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We've got to keep swinging.
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09:27.320 --> 09:29.640
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Oh, that definitely was Steven Pinker.
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That was definitely Steven Pinker.
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Yes, sir.
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Rebob, it was.
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Yes, sir.
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09:35.600 --> 09:36.600
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Rebob, it was.
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09:36.600 --> 09:42.480
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Do you remember this song from way back when what's going on?
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09:42.480 --> 09:43.480
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Oh, sorry.
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09:43.480 --> 09:44.480
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Hold on.
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09:44.480 --> 09:45.480
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Let me pause that for a second.
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09:45.480 --> 09:50.920
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If you remember this song, I think you must remember this song.
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09:50.920 --> 09:53.120
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It was used in a while ago.
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09:53.120 --> 09:54.720
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It's a nice one.
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09:54.720 --> 09:57.920
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It's from the late 80s, I believe, in Australia.
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09:57.920 --> 10:04.360
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And it was for the Australian Broadcasting Company back in the 80s, I believe.
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10:04.360 --> 10:07.200
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And it's a really peppy news song.
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10:07.200 --> 10:10.120
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If you've been here for a while, you're here at the top of the wave.
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10:10.120 --> 10:13.720
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And if you're joining me for the first time at Gigo and Biological, then you might be
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10:13.720 --> 10:18.560
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a skilled TV watcher or what we call a skilled social media user.
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10:18.560 --> 10:20.680
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And you might not be staying focused on the biology.
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You might be taking their bait, and you might not love your neighbor.
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10:23.760 --> 10:30.200
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And we're going to suggest that those strategies need to be reversed.
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It could be back when ABC was probably more relevant.
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Thanks for spreading the word, ladies and gentlemen.
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Thanks to the supporters.
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Thanks to the people who are spreading these streams.
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10:40.280 --> 10:42.120
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This is Gigo and Biological.
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A high-resistance, low-noise information brief brought to you by a biologist.
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10:54.040 --> 10:57.840
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And now, since I haven't used that music in a while, this timing was a little off, and
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10:57.840 --> 11:01.120
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that thing paused, and who knows why that paused.
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11:01.120 --> 11:02.760
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I guess I had to tap that one again.
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11:02.760 --> 11:05.080
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I'm just sorry about that.
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11:05.080 --> 11:08.640
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There's some old slide combinations here for the beginning.
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11:08.640 --> 11:15.120
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I just thought I'd break out something new, old, new, old, new kind of thing.
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11:15.120 --> 11:17.200
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Welcome to the show, ladies and gentlemen.
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This is Gigo and Biological.
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The paradigm is shifting right now.
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11:22.720 --> 11:25.000
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There are a lot of moving parts.
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11:25.000 --> 11:31.520
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It's not something that can be easily understood, but definitely it is responding to our work.
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11:31.520 --> 11:36.080
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What we do is having a difference on how people try to push this forward.
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11:36.080 --> 11:40.760
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So let's move the ball forward by not participating in their illusion.
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11:40.760 --> 11:44.280
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That's really the strategy that I'm advocating for.
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11:44.280 --> 11:49.000
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This is, again, Gigo and Biological, a high-resistance, low-noise information brief brought to you
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11:49.000 --> 11:50.000
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by a biologist.
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11:50.000 --> 11:53.200
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I got my shirt on today.
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11:53.200 --> 11:55.160
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Welcome to the show.
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11:55.160 --> 11:56.920
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I look, oh, I know what it is.
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11:56.920 --> 12:01.280
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These little tiny front lights aren't on, so I look a little better.
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12:01.280 --> 12:03.280
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It might be a little better.
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12:03.280 --> 12:06.800
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Somehow I look a little, I don't know, greasy or something.
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12:06.800 --> 12:08.480
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Anyway, welcome to the show.
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This is Gigo and Biological coming to you live from the back of a garage in Pittsburgh,
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Pennsylvania.
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Thanks for joining me.
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12:15.680 --> 12:20.160
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Today, we have a little bit of work to do as far as the study hall goes.
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12:20.160 --> 12:23.680
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It's quite a long video, but I'm going to put it at 1.5 speed and we're going to take
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12:23.680 --> 12:28.400
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some notes and see what we get from Stanley Prusner's presentation from 2002.
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12:28.960 --> 12:34.160
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First, I would like to at least comment on the fact that Jessica Hockett, myself, and
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a friend of Jessica named John, scanning, hold on, that's the wrong male, why did that
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12:47.440 --> 12:57.920
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open up, see, I'm starting to get angry at a certain somebody, well, I don't know what
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12:57.920 --> 13:01.440
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his name is off the top of my head and I'm not trying to be a creep about it, that's
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the way it is.
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13:02.440 --> 13:08.040
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I apologize for that, I should have had that written down, it starts with a K and a very
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clever guy.
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13:09.040 --> 13:13.200
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The three of us presented, Jessica presented the longest in the beginning, about a half
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an hour, maybe a little bit longer than that and then John presented it and I presented
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very quickly about five or eight minutes each.
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13:21.200 --> 13:24.920
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I think the message was pretty clear.
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The message was a little bit of biology, but just a lot of what the hell happened in
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New York City to explain why we didn't investigate it yet, while there isn't a memorial yet,
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while the names haven't been released yet, why we haven't explained how this all happened
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in such a neat, uniform way and didn't happen in Chicago, even though they had a case a
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year or a month before that and so I felt like it was a decent thing, I thought it went
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pretty well.
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Unfortunately, we were briefing staffers and although I could only see two staffers on
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screen, those two staffers were, my best guess is millennials and one of them told us that
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she had a master's in public health and that any primary literature I could provide to
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back up any of the things that we said would be greatly appreciated and at that stage it
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really dawned on me one of the things that has driven me nuts since the beginning of
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the pandemic but I haven't really been able to express adequately in words but if anybody
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ever says to you to send some primary literature to them which could help them understand something
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unless it's in an extremely specific case of misrepresentation of data or a very specific
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case of a representation of a very specific situation, there is no combination of primary
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literature papers under the number of 5,000 that could be sent to somebody so that they
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could get an adequate idea of how distorted biomedical sciences has become as a result
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of the application of this p-value ritual over the last 20 or 30 years and with intention
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that is.
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It's not to say that science can't be productive and can't figure things out but what I'm suggesting
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to you is that the distortion, the intentional distortion of certain parts of the general
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scientific understanding and our education surrounding it has resulted in the place that
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we are, allowed us to be led to a place where we can no longer exercise informed consent
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because we simply don't know and trying to hit a home run in that scenario is basically
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where I went wrong, I started this, I'm going to show you the slides that I used and try
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to give the talk as I intended it but since I felt as though John abbreviated his presentation
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greatly in order to facilitate my presentation and I already felt like the staffers were
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looking at their watches and deciding whether they could stay any longer or not or whether
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they needed to listen a couple times, the kind of the head staffer or the one that was speaking
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the most into the microphone said that she's trying to get at our main idea when Jessica
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was talking and it's funny because Jessica started her presentation with the main idea
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which is that we want you to figure out what the hell happened in New York City because what
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happened there was not a natural event, it was like a bomb went off, it was a man-made disaster
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and we want you to investigate it and then she explained all the stuff and so it's weird the
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staffer was still kind of circling back to that stuff so by the time I got the mic John had
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already presented and John had some really nice slides that were actually tacked right on to
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the slides that Jessica had so they could flawlessly change to that and he had one or two slides
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in particular that I want to get him on my stream to talk about which are really slides
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that I've asked actually I believe I've asked Denny Rankor a couple times if he could make
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them which would be to let me see if that's the guy yeah that would be the guy if he could
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make a slide where you did the American data but you took the New York City event out and he had
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that slide and it's actually very striking how intuitively it felt like wow they're really
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using that curve to imply something else because of 24,000 people died in that week and he spread
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them out around America there would still be kind of a signal especially if you started that signal
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from zero right and you know in America 24,000 people have died of COVID so far but the vast majority
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are in New York City asterisk so anyway I started off already with a very good background of course
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so 45 minutes 40 minutes of Jessica's presentation eight minutes of John's statistical you know look
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if you take New York out it's crazy if you look at New York by itself it's so statistically off
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off I mean we're not talking about p-values here you know we're talking about z-score and
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we are we were way way way way and these nobody making these statistics ever thought that
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excuse me ever thought that something like this would be you know a z-score of 200 or something
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like that so my presentation couldn't really go too deep into the biology so I started with the
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idea that informed consent couldn't be exercised by anyone at the start of the pandemic because
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we were misled about the biology and about the whole experience of what was happening
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and that New York City as Jessica and John have pointed out was really central
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to establishing that there was even a pandemic happening and therefore
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I started with again reminding people of this and so we were consciously manipulated into believing
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that a crisis was occurring that it was ongoing that something was spreading in the
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background this kind of thing and this manipulation was on purpose to get us to accept that this
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crisis was occurring but the only numbers we have are the numbers that Jessica just showed you
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are almost assuredly fraudulent that John also backed up with statistics that seem to indicate
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that it's almost assuredly a man made event and I would argue that that man made event
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allowed them to imply the existence of a novel virus that that you and and Senator Ron's staff
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are very much in belief existed and the reason why you're in belief of it I would argue is because
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they fooled you into thinking that the only question was whether it was a bad cave virus or
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whether it was again a function lab league and this mystery that we've been solving over the last
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four years has bamboozled all of us into accepting that what we were told in New York City was the
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start of something very very terrible was actually a mass casualty event that was misconstrued as this
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and the beginning of this the beginning of this whole mystery and I would argue that one of the
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ways that they did it and I went from this to this was that they didn't they didn't genuinely
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describe what all cause mortality was they didn't actually tell you that you know the excess deaths
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where we're experiencing can come from all kinds of things especially if we told doctors with fear
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and uncertainty and doubt that there was a new thing that you had to be afraid of yourself
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and that if this new thing was there you should treat these people entirely different than you
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would have ever treated them had you not been told that this new thing was there
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and all of those new things that we were told to do started killing people and nobody acted because
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there was this illusion of consensus that it was either a novel virus or a lab leak that we were
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responding to and that these people were dying from and the tools that they use to identify it
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the financial incentives that they they use to amplify it all of these things are completely
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ignored by the people that were just in front of you in that senate committee almost none of this
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part of the narrative where hundreds of thousands of Americans were murdered at the beginning of the
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pandemic in 2020 and 2021 that's wholly ignored and completely attributed only to the novel virus
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and all of these people's narrative and this is very dangerous because of course as Jessica just
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showed you New York City is this bump right there that bump right there is New York City and I was
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actually already over here down here and so the mind this bump right here is New York City
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and this could just be people acting really really badly this little rise here there's a
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lot there's a rise there right you can see that right there's not a dip that dip is missing this
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little pattern just completely gets disrupted and now all cause mortality is permanently elevated
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by a combination of confusion and stupidity bad ideas and transfection and the initial casualty
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event is something that Jessica showed you is not a natural phenomenon does not belie the spread of
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a virus but instead suggests a staged event now the reason why I think it's important to understand
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this is because these people who were in front of you in the senate not even a month ago and this is
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exactly what I said in front of your boss excuse me who are also at an event in Romania in November
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of 2023 where they heard Denny Rancor the guy in the square speak about these effects who he
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has actually been speaking since 2020 about the fact that the only deaths that are excess are
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correlative with poverty level household income serious mental illness obesity and the excess
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mortality is a direct correlation with all these things across states irrespective of whether they're
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a blue state or a red state and so he suggests that there's no evidence of spread of a particular
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novel pathogen there's evidence of bad ideas in the form of protocols and how they treat or don't
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|
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treat people and until the vaccines are released the all cause mortality doesn't go up significantly
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with any pattern that would indicate a respiratory virus but all of those people when they were in
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front of you last month none of them said that they all spoke very very generously about the 17
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million people that Denny Rancor said might be or estimated might be having been killed by the
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transfections but they conveniently left out that his data also shows that there's no evidence of
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|
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real novel spreading pathogen at risk additives spreading pathogen in 2020 and 2021 and this is
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|
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very crucial because those same people want us to interpret that what happened in the last
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four years well there was an RNA that caused a pandemic but transfection worked pretty well
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although we rushed it and so they want justice for the RNA that was released and should never have
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been made and they want justice for the people that were injured because we rushed transfection
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|
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before it was ready and this illusion is this this this solution is a lie the reality is is
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|
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that transfection in healthy humans was criminally negligent all along and that every biologist with
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an academic bench in any accredited university in America should have known that transfection is a
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long-standing technology even using a product like lipofectamine is a long-standing technology
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that's been used on the academic bench for acute expression of proteins in order to manipulate
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systems and understand and test hypotheses about different metabolic pathways in any
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any biological system however transfection is never shown proven
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successful in the treatment of anything that's not a deadly disease like a very specialized
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cancer and the fact that they either didn't speak up because they didn't know or didn't speak up
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because they were unwilling they did not have the principles to dictate that they should for the
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betterment of mankind for the protection of our grandkids from this illusion they're all culpable
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they're criminally negligent I lost my job at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
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because I spoke out about that specific thing and since then in the four years that I've been trying
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to understand what is and what isn't well understood RNA virology I've come to the conclusion that RNA
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cannot pandemic and they've always known it in fact it's a it's a central sort of
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it's a foundational part of the understanding we have or don't have about RNA viruses that they are
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almost intractable in culture because of the nature of how RNA viruses and especially RNA viruses like
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coronaviruses are are purported to replicate and those shortcomings are overcome by a technology
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called infectious clones and that's why with regard to ignoring all of these things these
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same people that were in front of you will never really enunciate a hypothesis which has anything
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to do with that that core technology of RNA virology which is infectious clones using DNA to make the
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RNA that is infectious and so our hypothesis my hypothesis is that the who declared a particular
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a dangerous pandemic of a particular sign and that's not obviously I said it better than that
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the the who declared a pandemic of a dangerous novel virus and it was a background signal that
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they that they misconstrued as spread they used an event in New York City to to create the illusion
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that that an impending crisis was coming and at the same time they already had a plan where they were
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ready to invert to change pneumonia and influenza what would have normally been classified as
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pneumonia and influenza to a new and novel respiratory pathogen that was a was a national security
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priority because this plan was in existence because not any kind of special technology or
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decree would be necessary for this to occur and because the vast majority if not the entirety of
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the deaths that occurred in 2020 can be explained by the confusion and fear and and
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incorrect behavior that resulted from the financial incentives from the testing and from the the
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messaging on on television there is no way that an RNA molecule can sustain a pandemic however there
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is a way for that sequence to be found in many places around the world and that again is an
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infectious clone and that could have been used if that was part of the national security
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operative to make operation to make absolutely sure that there was a seamless body of evidence
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that would support the idea of a circulating novel pathogen and would support the idea of
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rolling out this national security operation en masse would support the idea of co-opting
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anybody that ran to New York City and tried to save the day and found out that it wasn't what
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they said it was on TV and it would justify the use of several different groups of optoratives
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behind the scenes to make sure that this narrative never really got off the rails that nobody ever
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questioned a novel virus so that even when we got four years into the pandemic and people were in
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front of the senate and speaking about it that the novel virus would never be questioned that
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how many people died from it would never be questioned that we would already have moved on to whether
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or not the transfection worked or didn't work and how many people were hurt by it
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and this theater is actually an orchestrated attack on the united states from the from within
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orchestrated by people outside of the united states in cooperation with people inside of the
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u.s. government and that's what i think we need to understand most is that this is not an this
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is a national security issue for americans and what's happening in canada is separate from us
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and their emergency what happens in australia is their emergency and even the people that were in
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front of ron johnson in the senate are very very particular in how they express the emergency it's
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all of us it's everyone it's the who the globe has threatened no
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the only handles of power that we have the only way that we can act is through our government within
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our borders within our legislative system that's all we've got once we start trying to organize
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with australians or organize with canadians or or or then we're actually doing their work
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for them we're we're globalizing in a different way
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we need to decentralize that means that we don't need the help of people in other countries they
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have their own country to save and i think that's part of the reason why you should be very suspicious
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of having a senate hearing where half of the people are from different countries
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where half of the people have been on stage with the other half of the people in other countries
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multiple times why were they invited them none of this stuff was said to the staff i stopped a
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long time ago already but these were the things that i used i had this slide in there but i didn't
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really read it because i didn't i just went back after i what after this slide popped up i said i
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don't think i should use that slide should leave it here let you read this and then i'll stop for
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|
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any questions and there weren't any questions of course but that was already an hour into the
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meeting and i think the out the meeting was supposed to be a half an hour and so they were ready to
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leave as soon as i quit so some things went really well other things weren't ideal i don't think my
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presentation was ideal i was a bit riled up i was going too fast i had already become frustrated
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|
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with one of the guys one of the people on the staff because of an earlier comment
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i'll just i'll just comment on it now at one point in time when jeff was talking
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uh he was saying that um that there is evidence from previous winters and flu seasons that you know
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we've had nastier flu seasons in the past that we've not really made any fuss about and so what if
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these are actually coronaviruses in the background this background signal is always there and now
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they just misconstrued it as something else um of course i'm parsing his words incorrectly but
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33:12.560 --> 33:17.840
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she said um oh that's really interesting because of course there's lots of evidence or some people
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are saying that it was circulating in the background before 2020 and uh we didn't have any PCR testing
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33:23.840 --> 33:30.320
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and so that's what explains all this and they kind of went on but didn't go on because i think jeff
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was just trying to hurry up and he kind of acknowledged it um tried to sort of say
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something but it was the way that she trailed off her her comment that made it kind of just kind
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of stumbled through and ended up the presentation moving on and then i unmuted really quick and i
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33:48.320 --> 33:54.320
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was like whoa whoa whoa whoa i just want to go back one step because what um she just said we really
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33:54.320 --> 33:59.920
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need to point out a little better how ridiculously contradictory that statement would be how holding
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33:59.920 --> 34:05.120
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those two thoughts in your head shouldn't be possible if you listen to Jessica's presentation
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and you heard that New York City is this you know highly isolated event with you know orders of magnitude
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more dead bodies than in any other weeks that have ever come before after that and it's a very
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strange anomaly that occurs with at-home deaths and also nursing home deaths and all these things
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are at the same time um and so it's very strange um to believe that that represents a the spread
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of a particular dangerous pathogen those deaths but it was spreading before that and we didn't have
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tests and 20 000 people for a week weren't dying because we weren't locked down we weren't aware
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we were all just going to restaurants and drinking and and nobody was wearing masks and
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and so at some point you know like there was this oh yeah but it's a variant and all it's
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this and what about the lockdowns and you know so there was a lot of discussion but the end result
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35:14.320 --> 35:22.400
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always with Jessica's data is that but you can't explain this with that hand waving because it
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essentially death starts out very normal at 4 000 people per week and then goes
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or 4 000 people per April and then it goes and there's no biological explanation for that
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35:42.240 --> 35:47.120
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there would be EMTs that are traumatized from the sheer number of bodies they had to handle
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35:48.080 --> 35:53.280
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there would be nurses that are traumatized from the sheer number of people
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35:56.080 --> 36:00.240
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there would be memorials because it's like eight nine eleven events
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36:01.760 --> 36:08.320
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and so if if it was circulating before then but we didn't know how to track it and we were not
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36:08.320 --> 36:14.080
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doing anything to close down the borders then how in the hell didn't more bombs go off in other
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36:14.080 --> 36:22.960
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cities before this and she got very defensive and was like I don't think that's what I said I
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36:22.960 --> 36:26.880
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don't I don't I don't remember exactly what I said but I don't want to repeat it because I'm
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36:26.880 --> 36:35.280
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afraid you'll get it I'll get it wrong or I'll you'll take it out of con no you can't say that a
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36:36.480 --> 36:41.360
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deadly novel pathogen was circulating but it didn't kill anybody before we started testing for it
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36:41.360 --> 36:46.960
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or we didn't kill anybody before Tony Fauci made the 15 days to stop the spread announcement
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36:53.920 --> 36:59.760
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so that's where we were um you know that we're still right here right intramuscular injection of
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36:59.760 --> 37:04.000
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any combination of substances with the intent of augmenting the immune system is dumb
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transfection in healthy humans is criminally negligent in RNA cannot pandemic we're also
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37:09.280 --> 37:15.440
|
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beyond our own hypothesis here we're also trying um yeah I forgot I wanted to say I'm
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37:15.440 --> 37:19.600
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wearing Jimmy Dorr's shirt and I saw Jimmy Dorr the other day and I think although he doesn't have
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37:19.600 --> 37:23.280
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everything right he still thinks there was a novel virus it's probably gained a function and they
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37:23.280 --> 37:31.440
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lied about it I do think that his courage comes from a place without expertise right so all he
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37:31.440 --> 37:35.600
|
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knows for sure is that he was injured by the vaccine and people didn't take him seriously and that
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37:35.680 --> 37:40.000
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pissed him off and he realized that people were lying to him and now he's people he's realizing
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37:40.000 --> 37:45.360
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that a lot of people are liars and a lot of people can hold contradictory positions in their head
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37:45.360 --> 37:51.120
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and so he's as frustrated as I am that at some point in time it seemed like Robert F Kennedy
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37:51.120 --> 37:58.800
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Jr. was a really legit possibility as a normal everyday well-read smart guy with a lot of
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37:58.800 --> 38:04.320
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you know forward-looking ideas and tell you to hear him go on about climate change or Israel
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38:06.000 --> 38:10.560
|
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and so you know we're all we're all a bit frustrated with the world right now
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38:11.760 --> 38:18.800
|
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and so I think it's always good to in those times to to take a chance just kind of listen
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38:18.800 --> 38:26.640
|
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and take notes and and learn or maybe not learn from people who like it or not are having a very
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38:26.720 --> 38:35.760
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big impact on today going forward I have argued that we are probably should be expecting to see
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38:36.480 --> 38:44.560
|
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more crowds spelled yachob's disease more more protein misfolding disease is simply because we
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38:44.560 --> 38:54.080
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are starting to roll out mRNA transfection in old people all around the world and especially in
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|
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the United States and in Europe and that rollout as it continues with the flu and RSV and the
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39:00.480 --> 39:07.120
|
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pneumonia and whatever else they decide to roll out on people maybe even the shingles shot
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39:08.160 --> 39:15.040
|
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you're going to see more and more of these what have already been well-seeded in in the mainstream
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39:15.040 --> 39:23.200
|
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narrative as as ramifications of a gain of function virus and potentially a designer spike protein
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39:24.800 --> 39:29.440
|
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but actually it's from transfection and they knew this already for a long time they knew
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39:30.080 --> 39:35.600
|
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as they moved forward that the vaccine schedule as it stood was probably going to eventually fall
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39:35.600 --> 39:41.680
|
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apart that it wasn't going to stand this the the scrutiny of of the citizenry forever as they
|
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39:41.680 --> 39:47.840
|
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ramped it up that's part of the reason why I still find it so amazing that the average young parent
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39:47.840 --> 39:52.400
|
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isn't even isn't even curious about how many shots and when they give them in other countries but
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39:52.400 --> 39:56.480
|
|
if you do that math if you do that research you're going to find out that the American
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39:56.480 --> 40:04.960
|
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vaccine schedule is just an exclusively early and dense and so even if some of these purported
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40:04.960 --> 40:10.400
|
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intramuscular augmentations of the immune system were somewhat effective the way that they use
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40:10.400 --> 40:16.880
|
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them and deploy them in such early lifetime is absolutely absurd and also contradictory to what
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40:16.960 --> 40:22.560
|
|
we understand about everything to do with neuronal development and and immunological development
|
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40:25.280 --> 40:32.240
|
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in fact it's funny because you can get a you can see a nice talk by Michael Warby from before
|
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40:32.240 --> 40:37.440
|
|
the pandemic when he's talking about vaccinating people for flu and given the fact that they have
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40:37.440 --> 40:42.480
|
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lifelong immunity to the flu that they're exposed to as a kid we probably have to start vaccinating
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40:42.480 --> 40:48.880
|
|
people before birth if we really wanted to get ahead of this but of course that's actually the
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40:48.880 --> 40:54.000
|
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plan right that's why they want you to think that vaccinating pregnant women's no big deal
|
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40:54.000 --> 41:00.480
|
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yes you shouldn't eat sushi or uh unpasteurized cheese but vaccination is fine intramuscular
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41:00.480 --> 41:05.440
|
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injection of any combination of substances is fine for a for a pregnant woman
|
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41:05.760 --> 41:14.000
|
|
let's look at Stanley Prusiner and Prions because again I think that this narrative has been
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41:14.000 --> 41:18.800
|
|
seeded was given a Nobel Prize for goodness sakes I mean let's just talk intellectually a
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41:18.800 --> 41:25.840
|
|
little bit about a Nobel Prize that I was very very very very very very very very very very
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41:25.840 --> 41:34.720
|
|
cursorily connected to the Nobel Prize in 2014 was awarded for place cells and grid cells and
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41:34.720 --> 41:42.480
|
|
spatial coding in in the brain of rodents to John O'Keefe and Edward and Maybert Moser
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41:43.680 --> 41:50.720
|
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I was lucky enough to have worked with and studied with and trained with Edward and Maybert Moser and
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41:50.880 --> 42:01.040
|
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uh probably more importantly for me Edward uh Menowitter in in Norway um for almost five years
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42:01.040 --> 42:07.040
|
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it's where we had our boys um it was some of the most fun that I've ever had um as a young adult
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42:07.040 --> 42:13.120
|
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in my life um Norway was a great place to live um and I met a lot of great people there um I
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42:13.200 --> 42:21.120
|
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actually got I actually got an email from the universe sorry from the Society for Neuroscience
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42:21.120 --> 42:28.400
|
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inviting me to register for the meeting and uh at the bottom was the you know the SFN
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42:29.360 --> 42:36.000
|
|
meeting committee chair signature is Laura Colgan somebody who I worked with and met in the Moser
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42:36.000 --> 42:42.880
|
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lab um in the first couple years I was there a really nice um smart girl I shouldn't say girl
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42:42.880 --> 42:50.240
|
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smart woman um who's now I still believe working in New Orleans but I'm I apologize Laura for not
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42:50.240 --> 42:59.360
|
|
knowing where you are now but being the chairperson for uh for the chairman for the Society for Neuroscience
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42:59.360 --> 43:06.080
|
|
meeting a meeting of over 35 000 um neuroscientists every year um it's a pretty big step um I guess
|
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43:06.080 --> 43:12.560
|
|
that's on the way to being president of Society for Neuroscience um she was uh always gonna be
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43:13.200 --> 43:17.280
|
|
you know head of her department at some point so I'm really happy I was really happy to get that
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43:17.280 --> 43:24.560
|
|
letter and just um so anyway what was I saying Norway is a place where Edward and Maybers
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43:24.560 --> 43:30.560
|
|
Maybers Moser uh work and they in troll time and they actually won the Nobel Prize in 2014
|
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43:31.120 --> 43:38.080
|
|
um it was a year so after I had left I moved to Norway the Netherlands in Rotterdam to try and
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43:38.080 --> 43:43.120
|
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get tenure there and try to find a permanent job there we had intended to raise our kids um
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43:43.840 --> 43:52.080
|
|
in in Holland but that didn't work out um and so in 2016 we moved to Pittsburgh um but in 2014
|
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43:52.080 --> 43:56.080
|
|
they won that Nobel Prize and so you would have thought that at least that should help a little
|
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43:56.160 --> 44:01.520
|
|
bit with my grant applications and with my work but I was doing something in Rotterdam that was so
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44:02.160 --> 44:08.400
|
|
methodologically close to impossible that I was so obsessed with um that I basically dropped the
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44:08.400 --> 44:15.680
|
|
ball on getting funding and you know getting any big publications myself and so I found myself
|
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44:15.680 --> 44:20.320
|
|
where I was at that time because of you know choices that I had made in mountains that I decided
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44:20.320 --> 44:26.480
|
|
to climb so I'm not blaming anybody for those years um they were very taxing on our what on
|
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44:26.480 --> 44:34.080
|
|
our marriage because I was so obsessed with with making things work at work um the reason why I'm
|
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|
|
44:34.080 --> 44:40.080
|
|
talking about this is because um the year that they won the Nobel Prize they also won the Nobel Prize
|
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44:40.080 --> 44:46.320
|
|
with John O'Keefe who whose first discovery of play cells was actually in the early 70s you might
|
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44:46.400 --> 44:54.160
|
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say 1971 or 1972 is when this happened and then his students actually um two students from Norway
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44:54.160 --> 45:00.640
|
|
who came to his lab to learn the physical technique of making the electrodes that they recorded these
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45:00.640 --> 45:07.440
|
|
play cells in the hippocampus from as the animal freely navigated in a small box or maze and uh
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45:07.440 --> 45:11.520
|
|
they were they were keen on learning those and doing experiments with him and then they recorded
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45:11.520 --> 45:18.480
|
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from uh different uh upstream brain region anatomically um giving a lot of input to the
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45:18.480 --> 45:24.960
|
|
hippocampus as suggested by meno litter and there is where they found their discovery the grid cells
|
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45:24.960 --> 45:31.840
|
|
the point is is that that Nobel Prize was awarded to a total of three people essentially a teacher
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45:31.840 --> 45:40.160
|
|
and his students who had changed the field both several different methodological ways in the
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45:40.160 --> 45:45.840
|
|
sense of enabling the recording of these these neurons and and and show and developing the
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45:45.840 --> 45:52.400
|
|
anatomical techniques to follow where you recorded from and and use them for leisure all kinds of
|
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45:52.400 --> 45:57.840
|
|
things that essentially change the way that this kind of neuroscience was done these experiments
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45:57.840 --> 46:02.080
|
|
were done these these methodology spread all around the world and people were putting these
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46:02.080 --> 46:08.320
|
|
electrodes in all different heads and recording you know uh play cells and then trying to study
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46:08.400 --> 46:14.880
|
|
how play cells encoded memory and and and how they express themselves in different behavioral
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46:14.880 --> 46:21.920
|
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paradigms though I mean they actually changed or even created a field that before them didn't
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46:21.920 --> 46:28.400
|
|
really exist the hippocampus was originally really exciting because it was this one place where
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46:28.400 --> 46:33.600
|
|
bliss and lomo were able to create this long-term potentiation that everybody thought was memory
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46:33.600 --> 46:39.120
|
|
if you could change the electrical signal from a weak signal to a strong signal that was sort of
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46:39.120 --> 46:44.720
|
|
like this is like the first sort of in vitro preparation of memory but the hippocampus itself
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46:44.720 --> 46:51.360
|
|
and its functional sort of a model of its functional understanding really comes from this
|
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46:52.560 --> 47:01.280
|
|
decades of work that started with the play cells in in in London in John O'Keefe's lab in the 70s
|
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47:02.240 --> 47:10.000
|
|
and a and a and a Nobel Prize in medicine wasn't awarded until 2014 Stanley Prouzner got a Nobel
|
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47:10.000 --> 47:17.840
|
|
Prize for for prions and the idea of prions before everybody in the field even agreed that prions
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47:17.840 --> 47:24.640
|
|
were a thing I believe seven years after he coined the term
|
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47:24.640 --> 47:38.880
|
|
it should as as Peter Thiel says it should make you suspicious because the potential for people to
|
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47:38.880 --> 47:48.480
|
|
lie and exaggerate has been greatly increased and so your default should be yeah your default
|
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|
47:48.480 --> 47:54.080
|
|
assumption should be that there is lie and exaggeration here so let's take a look at this and see what
|
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47:54.160 --> 47:58.320
|
|
we can get out of it shall we
|
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47:58.320 --> 48:00.320
|
|
you
|
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48:21.680 --> 48:23.360
|
|
people who have dementia are demented
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48:24.000 --> 48:30.400
|
|
and so I think it's okay to talk about demented people what I'm going to tell you about is a
|
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|
48:30.400 --> 48:35.440
|
|
very special journey that happened here at UCSF that begins in 1972 and really is continuing up
|
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48:35.440 --> 48:42.240
|
|
to the present so we'll start with this slide and I'm assured the lights will go down so I'm going
|
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|
|
48:42.240 --> 48:46.800
|
|
to tell you about a saga that represents the triumph of scientific investigation over prejudice
|
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|
|
48:46.800 --> 48:51.760
|
|
it's really a journey from heresy to orthodoxy it's about prions really a new principle of infection
|
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48:51.760 --> 48:58.320
|
|
and disease now the diseases we're going to talk about our crew of New Guinea Natives
|
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|
48:58.320 --> 49:02.720
|
|
Croitesville the Ocob disease called CJD. Curseman stories are shanker disease and fatal insomnia
|
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49:02.720 --> 49:07.520
|
|
then scraping of sheep mad cow disease or BSE of cattle and chronic wasting disease of mule deer
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49:07.520 --> 49:13.120
|
|
and elf now it was 1972 as I mentioned to you a moment ago that I became interested in these
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49:13.120 --> 49:17.040
|
|
diseases and I had a patient from Marin County a 60 year old woman who was dying of Croitesville
|
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49:17.040 --> 49:21.440
|
|
the Ocob disease I was a resident in neurology here and as I began to learn about the animal
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49:21.440 --> 49:25.600
|
|
disorders scrappy and about the foray people in New Guinea who suffered of crew I thought
|
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|
49:25.600 --> 49:30.560
|
|
this could be really a fascinating area to pursue and really the fascination came from the chemical
|
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|
49:30.560 --> 49:34.400
|
|
point of view because there were a few tidbits of chemistry that suggested that the particles
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|
49:34.400 --> 49:38.480
|
|
causing these diseases must be much different than anything that was known this is a slide
|
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|
49:38.480 --> 49:43.040
|
|
by my colleague Steve D. Arman showing you what the brain looks like of a patient who typically dies
|
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49:43.040 --> 49:47.040
|
|
of Croitesville the Ocob disease it's a rare disease about one person in a million or one
|
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49:47.120 --> 49:51.360
|
|
every 10,000 deaths this is a much less common form with these huge vacuoles that you see
|
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49:53.360 --> 49:58.080
|
|
you have to excuse my voice uh that's this is a virus causing it not prions
|
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50:00.240 --> 50:02.160
|
|
now for many years scientists thought that scrappy
|
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50:06.480 --> 50:13.040
|
|
sorry I got brought brought lunch so I'm eating in the background so first of all let's go back
|
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50:13.040 --> 50:19.440
|
|
a little bit here to see that um he doesn't really tell you what this is is his brain or what
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50:20.480 --> 50:26.560
|
|
um I presume it's brain but it's interesting how quickly you went through it not to tell
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50:26.560 --> 50:34.800
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you what to look for what to see here there's no not normal form I mean it's again are we
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50:34.800 --> 50:41.440
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are we here to objectively inform people or are you implanting an idea that you they must accept
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50:42.320 --> 50:48.720
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and and I see already a problem here and yes it is on 1.5 speed if you want me to slow it down I will
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50:48.720 --> 50:53.280
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but I think you'll get used to it really quick yes this is a much less common form with these
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50:53.280 --> 51:00.800
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huge vacuoles that you see you have to excuse my voice uh that's this is a virus causing it not
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51:00.800 --> 51:07.920
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prions now for many years scientists thought that scrappy was caused by a virus because the
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disease is transmissible the agent is small there's a rise in scrappy agent tighter that
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51:12.080 --> 51:15.360
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precedes disease so that's the concentration or amount of scrappy agent and there are different
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51:15.360 --> 51:19.120
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strains of scrappy agent that produce different patterns of disease so there was a lot known
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51:19.120 --> 51:25.360
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when we got into this and what I thought in 1972 was that we really needed to do was to develop
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51:25.360 --> 51:29.280
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a method to isolate the infectious particles so the infectious particles in this cartoon are
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51:29.280 --> 51:33.760
|
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represented by these little red squares and everything else is junk and we needed to separate
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51:33.760 --> 51:39.040
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these so we could under this is gonna be hard to do while I'm uh I'm gonna try and eat lunch
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51:39.040 --> 51:47.440
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here and get done so this list of assumptions was gone through way too fast for this to be so
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51:47.440 --> 51:55.280
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scrappy agent is small and filterable that sounds like you know 1920s virology a rise in scrappy
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51:55.280 --> 52:01.680
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agent tighter precedes the disease yeah I wonder what that's really based on I wonder what
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52:01.840 --> 52:07.360
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does that mean that the more you inject in the brain of an animal the quicker it gets sick
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52:08.080 --> 52:14.640
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you see these assumptions are already sketchy to me the strains of scrappy agent produce
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52:14.640 --> 52:20.560
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different patterns of disease I'm willing to bet also is based on a very small number of observations
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52:21.280 --> 52:26.080
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meant to be used to generalize to this extent and to go through this slide this quickly
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52:26.320 --> 52:35.120
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um well anyway you'll see and we got into this now what I thought in 1972 was that we really
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52:35.120 --> 52:39.360
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needed to do was to develop a method to isolate the infectious particles so the infectious
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52:39.360 --> 52:43.120
|
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particles in this cartoon are represented by these little red squares and everything else is junk
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52:43.760 --> 52:48.240
|
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and we needed to separate these so we could understand what they were made of well the problem
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52:48.240 --> 52:54.800
|
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became that the particles did not behave very well so instead of having a very steep curve here
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52:54.800 --> 52:59.600
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the curve was very uh very gradual I won't go into the details of some of the more difficult
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52:59.600 --> 53:04.320
|
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pieces of science but this shows it a little more easily so the ideal behavior of a particle
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53:04.320 --> 53:07.680
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whether it's a virus or a protein or a piece of the classic acid whatever you might want to isolate
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53:08.880 --> 53:13.520
|
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it would when we fractionate it had a bit one piece of whatever you might want to get a bite
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53:13.520 --> 53:17.120
|
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instead of having a very steep curve that you could understand what they were made of
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53:18.080 --> 53:20.000
|
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and so now what we're looking here
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53:25.040 --> 53:31.440
|
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log scraping infectivity and so this is a cartoon that's sort of
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53:36.160 --> 53:42.400
|
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supposed to show you that somehow or another they've tried different ways to purify
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53:43.200 --> 53:50.640
|
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the scraping agent and it doesn't behave the way an agent would be expected to behave
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53:52.400 --> 53:58.000
|
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and that for them should be a problem it should indicate that maybe there isn't one
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53:58.000 --> 54:05.600
|
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agent but instead they try to stick very hard in fact he will stick to the assumption till the
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54:05.680 --> 54:12.160
|
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end of the talk that there is a single causative agent that they just have to develop better
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54:12.160 --> 54:18.240
|
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techniques in order to study well the problem became that the particles did not behave very
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54:18.240 --> 54:23.680
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well so instead of having a very steep curve here the curve was very uh very gradual I won't go
|
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54:23.680 --> 54:27.920
|
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into the details of some of the more difficult pieces of science but this shows it a little more
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54:27.920 --> 54:32.240
|
|
easily so the ideal behavior of a particle whether it's a virus or a protein or a piece of the
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54:32.240 --> 54:38.080
|
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plaque acid whatever you might want to isolate it would when we fractionate it have a bit one peak
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54:38.080 --> 54:42.000
|
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it looks like that but instead what we found was that the scrapey agent was spread throughout
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54:42.000 --> 54:43.280
|
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the entire uh gradient
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54:49.360 --> 54:52.560
|
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so again that's a problem right because it's not one thing
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54:53.760 --> 54:58.160
|
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now the argument I believe they're going to use for a little while at least is that the
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54:58.160 --> 55:01.760
|
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aggregation of a repetitive protein might produce this kind of smear
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55:03.840 --> 55:07.760
|
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however I think that that's you're going to very quickly see that in the end they're going to get
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55:07.760 --> 55:15.440
|
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back to it being a single thing and uh so just keep this in mind he's just telling us a story
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55:15.440 --> 55:18.960
|
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right now and so we're just listening to his story what we found was that the scrapey agent
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55:18.960 --> 55:21.280
|
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was spread throughout the entire uh gradient
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55:21.760 --> 55:27.840
|
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now the problem was compounded by the fact that when I started we needed to use 60 mice
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55:28.560 --> 55:31.520
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and we needed one year to carry out what was called an endpoint titration
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55:32.240 --> 55:36.960
|
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and all the red ones are positives and all the white ones are negative so what we would use
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55:36.960 --> 55:42.640
|
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are 60 mice as I said uh for a single sample so at each tenfold illusion we would have six mice
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55:42.640 --> 55:48.640
|
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and this assay took a year now we were able in the late 1970s to develop a new assay and this was
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55:48.720 --> 55:52.400
|
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based on the work of Richard Martian Wisconsin and Richard Kimberlin who was working with Richard
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55:52.400 --> 55:56.080
|
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Marsh but he was from England and we turned to the hamsters we followed their lead and we were
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55:56.080 --> 56:01.200
|
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able to reduce the number of animals from 60 down to 4 and the time from about 130 days for high
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56:01.200 --> 56:06.240
|
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titered samples to 70 days and we did this by constructing a standardized curve and then just
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56:06.240 --> 56:10.160
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simply reading the dose off of the curve and since we were interested in making more and more
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56:10.160 --> 56:13.920
|
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enriched preparations this worked to our advantage because we didn't have to wait to get this endpoint
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56:13.920 --> 56:17.520
|
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where we had the negatives and the positives after a whole year we could just simply read off the
|
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56:17.520 --> 56:22.960
|
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titer or the concentration from the standard curve this was a huge step it allowed us to do
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56:22.960 --> 56:26.240
|
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more experiments in a period of three years and have been done in the entire field over previous
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56:26.240 --> 56:31.280
|
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century now as I said a few moments ago isolating the scraping agent was a nightmare because it
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56:31.280 --> 56:39.040
|
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behaved I will admit that I don't really get that I'm gonna play that one more time and see if I
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56:39.040 --> 56:47.040
|
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can catch it better a more rapid and economical assay for the scraping agent it seems like to me
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56:47.040 --> 56:51.360
|
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what he's saying is if you want to find the scraping agent you have to inoculate 60 animals
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56:51.360 --> 56:55.600
|
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and then some of the animals will develop it and then from those animals you can isolate the scraping
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56:55.600 --> 57:08.800
|
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agent and with hamsters it's faster or something I don't let's listen the number of animals from
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57:08.800 --> 57:14.560
|
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but it was from new assay assay took a year now we were able in the late 1970s to develop a new
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57:14.800 --> 57:18.240
|
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assay and this was based on the work of Richard Martian Wisconsin and Richard Kimberlin who was
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57:18.240 --> 57:21.840
|
|
working with Richard Marsh but who was from England and we turned to the hamsters we followed their
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57:21.840 --> 57:26.080
|
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lead and we were able to reduce the number of animals from 60 down to four and the time from
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57:26.080 --> 57:32.000
|
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about 130 days for high-tired samples to 70 days and we did this by constructing a standardized
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57:32.000 --> 57:36.160
|
|
curve and then just simply reading the dose off of the curve and since we were interested in making
|
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57:36.160 --> 57:39.520
|
|
more and more enriched preparations this worked to our advantage because we didn't have to wait
|
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57:39.520 --> 57:43.120
|
|
to get this endpoint where we had the negatives and the positives after a whole year we could
|
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57:43.120 --> 57:48.320
|
|
simply read off the piter or the concentration from the standard curve this was a huge step it
|
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57:48.320 --> 57:52.160
|
|
allowed us to do more experiments in a period of three years and have been done in the entire field
|
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57:52.160 --> 57:56.560
|
|
over a previous century now as I said to you a moment ago isolating the scraping agent was a
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57:56.560 --> 58:01.200
|
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nightmare because it behaved very oddly and also because the method of measurement when we entered
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58:01.200 --> 58:09.360
|
|
the field was extremely difficult one year and 60 animals so having now moved away from mice
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58:09.440 --> 58:13.200
|
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into hamsters able to accelerate our studies by nearly 100 fold so what we could do in one year
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58:13.200 --> 58:16.480
|
|
would have taken us a century to do and there are few investigators that live a century much
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58:16.480 --> 58:22.400
|
|
less have a productive lifetime of the century so now what we could do is develop what's called
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58:22.400 --> 58:26.720
|
|
a purification scheme so we could use detergents and enzymes and back to the centrifuge and these
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58:26.720 --> 58:30.880
|
|
gradients and now we could follow up the lead that was present in the literature from a woman
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58:30.880 --> 58:35.440
|
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named Tig Valper who was a radiobiologist working in England and she had argued that because the
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58:35.440 --> 58:39.760
|
|
scraping agent was so resistant to UV and ionizing radiation that it did not contain RNA or DNA
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58:39.760 --> 58:44.720
|
|
nucleic acid and what we found was that all the procedures we use that alter nucleic acids did
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58:44.720 --> 58:48.880
|
|
not diminish the infectivity and the procedures that modified proteins led to an activation of
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58:48.880 --> 58:53.040
|
|
the scraping agent but we could only see this after we removed more than 99 percent of the junk
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58:53.040 --> 58:58.000
|
|
the unwanted molecules and having done that and that's me by the way with brown hair at the time
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58:58.640 --> 59:06.160
|
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I thought that by 1982 actually the spring of 81 that we had enough information to say that
|
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59:06.160 --> 59:10.400
|
|
this particle was not a virus or a tiny nucleic acid called a viroid discovered by Ted Deener in
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59:10.400 --> 59:14.880
|
|
the late 1960s and that we needed to give it a new name and so I had the audacity to call these
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59:14.880 --> 59:19.120
|
|
particles prions that's the long arm of the scientific community pushing on me and people
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59:19.120 --> 59:23.840
|
|
say well what do those people look like and here they are at the table that's my best slide you can
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59:23.920 --> 59:28.880
|
|
go home now and it became very very clear that prions eventually became very clear
|
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59:28.880 --> 59:32.640
|
|
our infectious proteins and I'm going to take you through a lot more evidence that builds the case
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59:32.640 --> 59:39.520
|
|
that prions our infectious proteins and then so basically I guess he won the Nobel prize for that
|
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59:39.520 --> 59:48.960
|
|
hamster work where the incubation time bioassay right is where they take scraping agent
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59:48.960 --> 59:57.920
|
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maybe it's prepared no better than what Marx describes on his stream for the other day
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01:00:00.000 --> 01:00:04.640
|
|
is then injected directly into the brains of mice and it used to take a year
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01:00:06.480 --> 01:00:12.800
|
|
but eventually they were able to accelerate that in hamsters I don't know if they altered the
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01:00:12.800 --> 01:00:20.480
|
|
scraping or if they had to change the PRP protein in a certain way to get that to happen we will
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|
01:00:20.480 --> 01:00:27.680
|
|
look at that in the coming journal clubs but in this summary and I apologize for eating lunch
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|
01:00:27.680 --> 01:00:36.080
|
|
I'm so hungry the problem with this is though is that I think that we went so quickly to assuming
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|
01:00:36.080 --> 01:00:40.080
|
|
that this is the real deal and that more importantly that this recapitulates it
|
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01:00:40.880 --> 01:00:52.080
|
|
right that's the problem here is the the animal model of a gain of function virus is one where
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01:00:52.080 --> 01:00:59.680
|
|
we go into a bat and we swab it we PCR test it we amplify all of the RNA that we see there
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01:01:00.800 --> 01:01:05.760
|
|
whatever genes are missing we replace by something that we find in a catalog and we rebuild
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01:01:06.480 --> 01:01:10.320
|
|
the coronavirus that was in that bat based on the fact that well if you assume the spike
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01:01:10.320 --> 01:01:15.840
|
|
protein is a new spike protein then I guess that's a new virus we can build it we can't grow it
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01:01:16.800 --> 01:01:20.480
|
|
we can't grow it and make a lot of it we can't culture it and make a lot of it
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01:01:22.480 --> 01:01:29.440
|
|
but we can use computer algorithms and and nonspecific PCR primers to amplify signals in the
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01:01:29.440 --> 01:01:36.000
|
|
background that may have already been there that may have nothing to do with the health of the
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01:01:36.000 --> 01:01:42.640
|
|
animal that may be a a bacteriophage signal for all we know because we do nothing to differentiate
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01:01:42.640 --> 01:01:47.040
|
|
between them this is very similar to that if we're going to have an animal model
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01:01:49.120 --> 01:01:55.040
|
|
that has nothing to do with it if we start with humanized mice and infectious clones
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01:01:55.680 --> 01:02:01.600
|
|
that are purported to be the same as the stuff they found in the bat and now we have this model
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01:02:01.600 --> 01:02:09.680
|
|
of coronavirus disease where if we squirt this RNA or or the the cell culture products that are
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01:02:09.680 --> 01:02:16.080
|
|
produced after we transfect a cell culture with this RNA if we put that material into a mouse
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01:02:16.080 --> 01:02:24.480
|
|
that we call that a model of ARDS or SARS then then then we have a whole industry that can evolve
|
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01:02:24.480 --> 01:02:29.200
|
|
from that that has nothing to do with whatever the original natural phenomenon was
|
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|
01:02:31.040 --> 01:02:37.840
|
|
and so it's it's at least worth extreme inspection to find out whether this animal model that's just
|
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|
01:02:37.840 --> 01:02:43.920
|
|
been sort of just presented to us as accepted and and proven and well understood
|
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01:02:45.200 --> 01:02:52.320
|
|
is actually an adequate bridge model to come from what happens in scrapie or what happens in
|
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|
01:02:52.400 --> 01:03:00.080
|
|
crowds filled yachab or what happens in kuru and notice that this entire lecture and all the
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|
01:03:00.080 --> 01:03:08.720
|
|
lectures about protein misfolding have absolutely never ever mentioned the immune system responding
|
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01:03:08.720 --> 01:03:17.040
|
|
to misfolded proteins do you see how significant it is that if you study protein misfolding you
|
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01:03:17.040 --> 01:03:22.160
|
|
don't worry about the immune system at all the immune system is not involved this is a completely
|
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01:03:22.160 --> 01:03:26.880
|
|
different thing that has to do with aggregation and cell death and you know whatever
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01:03:34.880 --> 01:03:40.480
|
|
so now he's going to purify the protein and use using sucrose gradient which he showed earlier
|
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01:03:40.480 --> 01:03:46.160
|
|
didn't work and so now we're at the development of the prion concept procedures altering nucleic
|
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|
01:03:46.160 --> 01:03:52.640
|
|
acids don't diminish the infectivity so chemicals that are that are thought or assumed to get rid
|
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01:03:52.640 --> 01:04:00.720
|
|
of all nucleic act nucleic acid still the infectivity of these preparations is apparently still preserved
|
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|
01:04:00.720 --> 01:04:06.560
|
|
when you do what when you inject them into the brain of an animal or when you use some other
|
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|
01:04:06.560 --> 01:04:17.280
|
|
probably not very adequate experimental correlate for what you what you would think happens in
|
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01:04:17.280 --> 01:04:21.760
|
|
these natural forms i'm not suggesting that the natural form of kuru doesn't exist
|
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|
01:04:22.640 --> 01:04:28.240
|
|
crowds felt yachab as a result of using an adenavirus encoding a viral spike protein fusion protein
|
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|
01:04:28.880 --> 01:04:34.000
|
|
could potentially have caused crowds felt crowds felt yachab disease in 28 people like
|
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01:04:34.080 --> 01:04:41.440
|
|
luke montanier's paper said i'm suggesting to you that genetic technologies like transformation
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01:04:41.440 --> 01:04:49.280
|
|
and transfection we're already known a long time ago to interfere with and maybe even induce
|
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|
01:04:49.280 --> 01:04:58.640
|
|
maladaptive states in healthy animals and so what this means is is that we need to be very careful
|
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|
01:04:58.640 --> 01:05:05.440
|
|
about how many of these very recently seeded biological phenomenon biological ideas were
|
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|
01:05:05.440 --> 01:05:13.440
|
|
actually seeded by people who have intention of confusing us and about this sounds very paranoid
|
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|
|
01:05:13.440 --> 01:05:21.200
|
|
but this is the same year that sars came on the world 2002 when he's given this talk is the year
|
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|
|
01:05:21.280 --> 01:05:27.680
|
|
that sars is going to be released or the year after i guess it's 2003 really when it happened
|
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|
|
01:05:31.120 --> 01:05:36.320
|
|
so you can almost imagine in fact a scenario over the last couple decades where this
|
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|
01:05:37.040 --> 01:05:45.280
|
|
this potential bio hazards from mother nature these mythologies were already these were
|
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|
|
01:05:45.280 --> 01:05:54.560
|
|
mythologies were seeded and while we're being told that these phenomenon are natural we we
|
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01:05:54.560 --> 01:06:01.680
|
|
have no way of knowing we have no way of knowing we do have pretty good reason to believe that
|
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01:06:01.680 --> 01:06:06.320
|
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they've been messing around with all sorts of biotechnologies for the last 30 years in attempt to
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01:06:06.960 --> 01:06:13.760
|
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figure stuff out and so there's no question that one of the things that could have resulted from
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01:06:13.920 --> 01:06:21.120
|
|
are these kinds of diseases there's also no question in my mind that that kuru and eating
|
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01:06:21.120 --> 01:06:25.600
|
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your dead relatives might be a bad idea that would involve your immune system going a little
|
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01:06:25.600 --> 01:06:29.120
|
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going a little haywire can imagine that i can
|
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01:06:33.600 --> 01:06:38.720
|
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but i do think that an infectious protein is much more interesting from a bioweapon perspective
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01:06:38.720 --> 01:06:43.920
|
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than it is from a biological perspective not diminishing the infectivity and the procedures
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01:06:43.920 --> 01:06:47.520
|
|
that modified proteins led to an activation of the scrapey agent but we could only see this
|
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01:06:47.520 --> 01:06:52.320
|
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after we removed more than 99 percent of the junk the unwanted molecules and having done that
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01:06:53.200 --> 01:07:00.480
|
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and that's me by the way with brown hair at the time i thought that by 1982 actually the spring
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01:07:00.480 --> 01:07:05.280
|
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of 81 that we had enough information to say that this particle was not a virus or a tiny nucleic
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01:07:05.360 --> 01:07:09.760
|
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acid called a viroid discovered by Ted Deener in the late 1960s and that we needed to give it a
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01:07:09.760 --> 01:07:13.920
|
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new name and so i had the audacity to call these particles prions that's the long arm of the
|
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01:07:13.920 --> 01:07:17.600
|
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scientific community pushing on me and people say well what do those people look like and here
|
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01:07:17.600 --> 01:07:23.760
|
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they are at the table that's my best slide you can go home now and it became very very clear
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01:07:23.760 --> 01:07:27.760
|
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that eventually became very clear our infectious proteins and i'm going to take you through a
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01:07:27.760 --> 01:07:32.800
|
|
lot more evidence that builds the case that prions are infectious proteins and then as we move through
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01:07:32.880 --> 01:07:37.440
|
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this we'll get to some very new data and we'll talk about bse and we'll talk about other prions
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01:07:37.440 --> 01:07:40.960
|
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diseases of humans and then at the end we'll talk about therapies and there'll be a lot of chemistry
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01:07:40.960 --> 01:07:45.600
|
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at the end but it won't be complicated because i put the chemistry in the beginning you'll all
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01:07:45.600 --> 01:07:51.600
|
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leave so here we have there is there is something to be said about too many jokes
|
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01:07:52.800 --> 01:07:57.120
|
|
have this purification scheme where we remove 99 percent of the unwanted particles we then knew
|
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01:07:57.120 --> 01:08:01.120
|
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that a protein was important and we went on to identify and find this protein and then the next
|
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01:08:01.200 --> 01:08:05.040
|
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thing we did was to try to determine whether we could separate this protein from the infectivity
|
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01:08:05.040 --> 01:08:08.800
|
|
and so we used a lot of approaches so we're now measuring the biological activity enhancers
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01:08:08.800 --> 01:08:12.080
|
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and we're looking at the protein by physical methods and we tried to separate it and what we
|
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01:08:12.080 --> 01:08:15.600
|
|
found is that every time we destroyed the protein we destroyed the infectivity or every time we
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01:08:15.600 --> 01:08:22.800
|
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destroyed the infectivity the protein was removed or destroyed and when we eventually figured out
|
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01:08:22.800 --> 01:08:26.560
|
|
what was going on we found that there was a normal form of the protein in all of us now this is a
|
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01:08:26.560 --> 01:08:30.240
|
|
gel and the proteins migrate and the smaller they are the faster they migrate through this gel this
|
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01:08:30.320 --> 01:08:35.360
|
|
porous material sort of like jello and then we can stain them with antibodies and so what we found
|
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01:08:35.360 --> 01:08:39.920
|
|
was that the protein was a protein in all of us which is a normal form of the prion protein
|
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01:08:39.920 --> 01:08:43.920
|
|
and when we treat with enzymes that destroy proteins the protein was completely destroyed
|
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01:08:43.920 --> 01:08:48.400
|
|
but in the brains of these hamsters that became ill with scrapi what we found was that there was
|
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01:08:48.400 --> 01:08:51.760
|
|
both a normal form of the protein and another form of the protein that when we treated with
|
|
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|
01:08:51.760 --> 01:08:55.760
|
|
enzymes that destroy proteins there was a residual piece and here they're higher-ordered multiverse
|
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01:08:56.720 --> 01:09:02.400
|
|
they're larger forms that are aggregated of the scrapi causing protein and eventually
|
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01:09:02.400 --> 01:09:06.320
|
|
the protein that I just showed you in the gel after we treated with proteases what we did was to use
|
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01:09:06.320 --> 01:09:11.600
|
|
a lot of very complicated equipment in collaboration with a man named Leroy Hood who was at Caltech at
|
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01:09:11.600 --> 01:09:18.480
|
|
the time and Darlene Groff who's been working with me for 25 years went to Caltech over a period
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01:09:18.480 --> 01:09:23.040
|
|
of a year about seven different times and we finally were able to work out what's called the
|
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01:09:23.120 --> 01:09:27.360
|
|
amino acid sequence the N terminal 15 amino acids so right in this region now this was more
|
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01:09:27.360 --> 01:09:30.960
|
|
complicated because it was ragged because we'd thrown in these proteases but what we had found
|
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01:09:30.960 --> 01:09:35.840
|
|
of course is that if we threw the proteases into the normal preparations there was nothing well
|
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|
01:09:35.840 --> 01:09:39.680
|
|
now we had the possibility of doing what's called reverse genetic engineering and we went backwards
|
|
|
|
01:09:39.680 --> 01:09:43.680
|
|
and with Charles Weisman and Zurich we found the gene that codes for the prion protein and we found
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01:09:43.680 --> 01:09:47.280
|
|
that all of us have this gene and it became very clear that all of us have the normal form of the
|
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|
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01:09:47.280 --> 01:09:51.360
|
|
prion protein and then by a process that we still don't understand in great detail it could be
|
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01:09:51.440 --> 01:09:55.760
|
|
converted into a protein which is infectious and which can eventually kill us as human beings or
|
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|
01:09:55.760 --> 01:10:02.000
|
|
kill animals like the cattle in Europe so now we knew that there was a gene for the protein of the
|
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|
|
01:10:02.000 --> 01:10:09.280
|
|
prion and the protein of the prion we called PRP scrapey and it's and that this gene encodes
|
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|
|
01:10:09.280 --> 01:10:12.960
|
|
the precursor protein PRPC there's a mistake here it's not found it's only found in six mammals
|
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|
01:10:12.960 --> 01:10:18.640
|
|
but the gene is found in all mammals so now we had two proteins the precursor protein PRPC that
|
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|
01:10:18.720 --> 01:10:23.440
|
|
we all have a normal protein and the protein found in okay so just notice the wording that
|
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|
01:10:23.440 --> 01:10:28.320
|
|
he's using here a precursor protein we have to assume that it does something normally
|
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01:10:29.280 --> 01:10:35.440
|
|
and that's the normal protein and that the the prion scrapey protein has to be the abnormal
|
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|
|
01:10:35.440 --> 01:10:42.480
|
|
protein so it's really weird that he doesn't say it in the way that his disease model implies it
|
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|
|
01:10:42.480 --> 01:10:50.320
|
|
should be said um as if the protein only exists to cause the disease in its precursor form it's
|
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|
|
01:10:50.320 --> 01:10:56.640
|
|
fine in its functional form it causes disease that's really not the way we should be thinking of this
|
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|
01:10:57.520 --> 01:10:58.480
|
|
especially if
|
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|
|
01:11:02.240 --> 01:11:07.760
|
|
we have to work from the assumption that the that the that the prion protein does something
|
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|
|
01:11:08.640 --> 01:11:14.560
|
|
otherwise what is it there for on the membrane a protein that's on the memory that doesn't do
|
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|
|
01:11:14.560 --> 01:11:20.880
|
|
anything sounds like a very bad idea to me had two proteins the precursor protein PRPC that we
|
|
|
|
01:11:20.880 --> 01:11:25.680
|
|
all have a normal protein and the protein found in the animals that were ill with prion disease
|
|
|
|
01:11:26.400 --> 01:11:29.760
|
|
we did another set of experiments and we asked what about the messenger RNA so the messenger
|
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|
|
01:11:29.760 --> 01:11:34.080
|
|
RNA is the intermediate between the gene and the protein and we said well the messenger RNA ought
|
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|
|
01:11:34.080 --> 01:11:39.120
|
|
to rise as the as these animals go out toward the these are now mice that get sick at 130 days
|
|
|
|
01:11:39.120 --> 01:11:44.320
|
|
as incubation time gets longer and longer and so the n-terminal amino acid sequence of of
|
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|
|
01:11:45.520 --> 01:11:54.960
|
|
prion protein 27 to 30 is determined isocoding DNAs used to retrieve PRPC DNA clones
|
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|
|
01:11:55.520 --> 01:12:01.600
|
|
so my guess is is that they used
|
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|
01:12:04.320 --> 01:12:13.520
|
|
DNAs that would encode for the amino acid sequence of the n-terminal then they use those DNA probes
|
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|
|
01:12:13.520 --> 01:12:23.600
|
|
and they hybridized against the DNA of a human or a mouse or something like my human I guess
|
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|
|
01:12:23.600 --> 01:12:34.320
|
|
and found a genomic DNA to which that n-terminal DNA hybridized to
|
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|
|
01:12:40.240 --> 01:12:46.400
|
|
expected the prion protein mRNA levels were similar in uninfected controls with animals with
|
|
|
|
01:12:46.400 --> 01:12:54.880
|
|
scraping so when they look for the mRNA for the for the protein they find it and two forms are
|
|
|
|
01:12:54.880 --> 01:13:05.600
|
|
identified cellular and pathogenic and is derived from pr by n-terminal truncation let's see how
|
|
|
|
01:13:05.600 --> 01:13:10.400
|
|
he explains this hider the prions goes up the messenger RNA ought to rise but in fact the messenger
|
|
|
|
01:13:10.400 --> 01:13:14.000
|
|
RNA state exactly the same it never changed and this worried us a little bit where we're looking
|
|
|
|
01:13:14.000 --> 01:13:18.480
|
|
at the right protein but we got lucky because using that same technology genetic engineering
|
|
|
|
01:13:18.480 --> 01:13:23.360
|
|
we now looked at black mice or brown mice and we looked at these white mice the white mice had
|
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|
|
01:13:23.360 --> 01:13:29.280
|
|
long incubation times about 225 days the short ones about 130 days and what we found was that this
|
|
|
|
01:13:29.280 --> 01:13:33.360
|
|
gene the prion protein gene that i've been talking about determined whether the mice had a short
|
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|
|
01:13:33.360 --> 01:13:38.320
|
|
incubation time or a long incubation time and the mice with long incubation times had two amino
|
|
|
|
01:13:38.320 --> 01:13:43.680
|
|
acids out of 250 that were different and so this began to cement the idea that this protein PRP
|
|
|
|
01:13:43.680 --> 01:13:49.120
|
|
that we discovered was key in the disease process wow so that's a really key thing to realize because
|
|
|
|
01:13:49.120 --> 01:13:53.920
|
|
what is this established this is we need to find this paper so i'm going to write this one down
|
|
|
|
01:13:53.920 --> 01:14:02.640
|
|
because this is a really important one it's 86 through 87 and this is brown and white mice huh
|
|
|
|
01:14:09.360 --> 01:14:13.120
|
|
the reason why this is important is because this whole thing would have been established
|
|
|
|
01:14:13.120 --> 01:14:19.520
|
|
by a p-value test right if the p-value between the incubation time and the brown mice and the
|
|
|
|
01:14:19.520 --> 01:14:26.240
|
|
incubation time and the white mice in the experiment was significant as determined by whatever probability
|
|
|
|
01:14:26.240 --> 01:14:33.200
|
|
test they use that ritual would be enough to establish this as fact and then he would go on to
|
|
|
|
01:14:33.200 --> 01:14:40.080
|
|
say that these two amino acid differences between those mice and those mice are the reason why the
|
|
|
|
01:14:40.080 --> 01:14:46.800
|
|
incubation time is different and then that whole field moves on based on the idea that well i mean
|
|
|
|
01:14:46.800 --> 01:14:56.640
|
|
obviously think about how that that could potentially set up years and years of being wrong
|
|
|
|
01:14:59.040 --> 01:15:02.560
|
|
that's not definitive proof that this protein's involved
|
|
|
|
01:15:04.320 --> 01:15:09.680
|
|
how can that be even if there is a p-value difference there how can that be assumed
|
|
|
|
01:15:09.760 --> 01:15:13.360
|
|
is that the only difference between the brown mice and the white mice
|
|
|
|
01:15:15.440 --> 01:15:17.280
|
|
wow isn't that special
|
|
|
|
01:15:19.360 --> 01:15:24.000
|
|
isn't that special the lady from mit told us that all those heat shock proteins are really
|
|
|
|
01:15:24.000 --> 01:15:28.960
|
|
responsible for protein folding and misfolding and that they're like chaperone proteins and
|
|
|
|
01:15:28.960 --> 01:15:34.240
|
|
it's so cool because yeasts are eukaryotes and were eukaryotes and we have the same proteins
|
|
|
|
01:15:34.240 --> 01:15:37.920
|
|
that chaperone are protein folding and prevent them from misfolding
|
|
|
|
01:15:39.520 --> 01:15:45.120
|
|
and so it doesn't matter that the brown mice might have different heat shock protein variants
|
|
|
|
01:15:45.120 --> 01:15:51.520
|
|
than the white mice do it doesn't matter at all i think the lady from mit who's dead now would
|
|
|
|
01:15:51.520 --> 01:15:59.040
|
|
probably disagree but i don't know what's going on here that's how p-values are used to create
|
|
|
|
01:15:59.040 --> 01:16:03.760
|
|
the distortion of information and knowledge from noise
|
|
|
|
01:16:06.640 --> 01:16:08.240
|
|
it's a single experiment
|
|
|
|
01:16:10.480 --> 01:16:17.280
|
|
where the difference between incubation times to injection of material in their brain
|
|
|
|
01:16:17.280 --> 01:16:22.800
|
|
has nothing to do with looking at what was injected or where it was injected or how much
|
|
|
|
01:16:22.800 --> 01:16:29.360
|
|
exactly was injected it has to do with those two amino acids in that one protein that has to
|
|
|
|
01:16:29.360 --> 01:16:33.440
|
|
be i mean look i mean it has to be look at the other experiments we did there was like a gel
|
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|
|
01:16:33.440 --> 01:16:33.840
|
|
and stuff
|
|
|
|
01:16:38.160 --> 01:16:42.880
|
|
out of 250 that were different and so this began to cement the idea that this protein
|
|
|
|
01:16:42.880 --> 01:16:45.840
|
|
PRP that we discovered was key in the disease process
|
|
|
|
01:16:47.360 --> 01:16:50.480
|
|
so what i've told you is that not only did the pre-on protein track with scraping
|
|
|
|
01:16:50.480 --> 01:16:53.680
|
|
infectivity so every time we tried to alter the protein we altered the infectivity and vice versa
|
|
|
|
01:16:53.680 --> 01:16:58.880
|
|
but also amino acid substitutions changed the incubation times so these findings link the phenotype
|
|
|
|
01:16:58.880 --> 01:17:02.320
|
|
which is called the disease characteristics in this case to the genotype that changes
|
|
|
|
01:17:02.320 --> 01:17:07.520
|
|
their mutations in the DNA okay so to a certain extent this is interesting because what it now
|
|
|
|
01:17:07.520 --> 01:17:14.320
|
|
implies of course is that function is related to structure which is one of the real overarching
|
|
|
|
01:17:14.320 --> 01:17:19.520
|
|
principles of reductionist biology one of the things that we all agree on as we move through
|
|
|
|
01:17:19.520 --> 01:17:23.680
|
|
the world trying to understand what's going on if you want to understand how a tree works
|
|
|
|
01:17:25.280 --> 01:17:29.840
|
|
it's probably related to its structure it's its structure in the macro sense and also structure
|
|
|
|
01:17:29.840 --> 01:17:37.600
|
|
at the cellular level and the molecular level but structure begets function is something that holds
|
|
|
|
01:17:37.600 --> 01:17:45.280
|
|
at the protein level from everyone's perspective the the amino acid sequence determines its structure
|
|
|
|
01:17:46.240 --> 01:17:58.160
|
|
the the RNA sequence that encoded the amino acid is to a large extent synonymous
|
|
|
|
01:17:59.600 --> 01:18:05.600
|
|
but we know that synonymous mutations that don't change the amino acid for which they code
|
|
|
|
01:18:06.160 --> 01:18:10.960
|
|
can still be highly correlated with genetic disease
|
|
|
|
01:18:11.760 --> 01:18:20.320
|
|
and so clearly the cartoon about yes we have DNA we translated it to RNA the RNA translates
|
|
|
|
01:18:20.320 --> 01:18:25.600
|
|
to amino acids and the amino acids arrange in a certain way because there are three-dimensional
|
|
|
|
01:18:25.600 --> 01:18:32.240
|
|
electrostatic shape inside of a three-dimensional electrostatic solvent called water and so they
|
|
|
|
01:18:32.240 --> 01:18:40.720
|
|
form a particular shape to try and best optimize their energy distribution in a stable way
|
|
|
|
01:18:44.240 --> 01:18:48.080
|
|
but that's a variable process a process that isn't understood a process that
|
|
|
|
01:18:48.080 --> 01:18:54.560
|
|
occurred to the dead lady from MIT actually goes wrong an awful lot and we waste a lot of energy
|
|
|
|
01:18:54.560 --> 01:19:03.360
|
|
misfolding proteins all the time and that prion protein now is a very special protein that has
|
|
|
|
01:19:03.360 --> 01:19:10.000
|
|
the propensity apparently as we move forward we're going to hear how it can can cause other
|
|
|
|
01:19:10.000 --> 01:19:16.080
|
|
proteins with a similar sequence to misfold as well so prion protein misfolds other prion protein
|
|
|
|
01:19:16.080 --> 01:19:20.400
|
|
even though we don't know what prion protein really does in the in the healthy animal it's
|
|
|
|
01:19:20.480 --> 01:19:28.320
|
|
there it's mRNA is there all the time and in in some animals like hamsters it develops faster
|
|
|
|
01:19:28.320 --> 01:19:34.400
|
|
than other animals like mice and in some brown mice it develops longer faster than in white mice
|
|
|
|
01:19:38.800 --> 01:19:42.080
|
|
now we come to a whole different approach and we spent six years here at UCSF
|
|
|
|
01:19:43.600 --> 01:19:47.760
|
|
trying to identify the difference between PRPC the normal form of the protein that all of us have
|
|
|
|
01:19:47.760 --> 01:19:52.000
|
|
and the scrapey form of the protein that's found only in the disease and we looked and looked so
|
|
|
|
01:19:52.000 --> 01:19:58.560
|
|
far the only evidence that they have of a different protein is that gel keep that in mind right do
|
|
|
|
01:19:58.560 --> 01:20:02.400
|
|
we need to go back to that a little bit if I just go back to the gel
|
|
|
|
01:20:09.120 --> 01:20:14.880
|
|
this is the gel right this this is the gel that he explained is the evidence that he has for
|
|
|
|
01:20:14.960 --> 01:20:21.600
|
|
prion protein being different this is the normal protein this is the lane with the normal protein
|
|
|
|
01:20:21.600 --> 01:20:30.480
|
|
after they digested it with proteases this is the protein apparently from the the scrapey infected
|
|
|
|
01:20:30.480 --> 01:20:36.160
|
|
animal i don't know what all this other crap is that didn't show up in this line which is also
|
|
|
|
01:20:36.160 --> 01:20:43.360
|
|
very frustrating how am i supposed to compare this experiment if this lane is supposed to be
|
|
|
|
01:20:43.360 --> 01:20:47.920
|
|
equivalent to that lane except this lane has four more bars in it than this one does
|
|
|
|
01:20:47.920 --> 01:20:54.240
|
|
what kind of shit experiment is this and how is he able to just get through the all
|
|
|
|
01:20:54.240 --> 01:21:00.480
|
|
gel it moves uh the smaller fragments move faster than the the heavy fragments and uh so uh yeah
|
|
|
|
01:21:01.360 --> 01:21:06.560
|
|
so what are these fragments well anyway his argument is is that this is the protease
|
|
|
|
01:21:06.560 --> 01:21:13.840
|
|
digested side and here they still have a protein whereas here it's all gone and so in that in the
|
|
|
|
01:21:13.840 --> 01:21:19.040
|
|
in the normal functioning prion protein format it can be completely digested by protease and here
|
|
|
|
01:21:19.040 --> 01:21:25.920
|
|
it can't that is the only evidence that they have for an alternate form of a protein that's it
|
|
|
|
01:21:27.360 --> 01:21:29.200
|
|
because the sequence is the same
|
|
|
|
01:21:31.520 --> 01:21:34.800
|
|
as best they can tell it's just one gene
|
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|
01:21:37.520 --> 01:21:45.120
|
|
these are not as related complementary experiments as he's implying and without careful
|
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|
01:21:46.240 --> 01:21:54.000
|
|
and maybe even several months of hard studious work you can't claim to be an expert on prions
|
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|
01:21:54.000 --> 01:22:00.320
|
|
because nobody explains it well enough to be this is not a good enough explanation of prions
|
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|
|
01:22:00.400 --> 01:22:04.080
|
|
for me to say oh yeah i guess i believe it this is hand waving
|
|
|
|
01:22:07.280 --> 01:22:13.200
|
|
this is how they explain to you how pandemics work and why masks work and why lockdowns if done
|
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01:22:13.200 --> 01:22:18.880
|
|
correctly work and why zero virus after the end of a pandemic is a useful goal
|
|
|
|
01:22:20.080 --> 01:22:24.480
|
|
it's that kind of it's that kind of explanation on protein track with scraping
|
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|
01:22:24.480 --> 01:22:27.760
|
|
infectivity so every time we try to alter the protein we alter the infectivity and vice versa
|
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|
01:22:27.760 --> 01:22:32.960
|
|
but also amino acid substitutions change the incubation times so these findings link the phenotype
|
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|
01:22:32.960 --> 01:22:36.480
|
|
which is called the disease characteristics in this case to the genotype the changes are
|
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|
|
01:22:36.480 --> 01:22:42.400
|
|
mutations in the DNA thank you solar flare i'm clicking a whole different approach and we spent
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01:22:42.400 --> 01:22:47.840
|
|
six years here at UCSF trying to identify the difference i'll take it between prpc the normal
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|
01:22:47.840 --> 01:22:51.360
|
|
form of the protein that all of us have and the scraping form of the protein that's found only
|
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|
01:22:51.360 --> 01:22:54.800
|
|
the disease and we looked and looked for a chemical difference because if we could have found a
|
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|
01:22:54.800 --> 01:22:58.960
|
|
chemical difference then it would be very easy to make that chemical change on prpc
|
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|
|
01:22:58.960 --> 01:23:03.680
|
|
and convert it into prpc but we never found it this was a work of a young postdoc Neil Stahl
|
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|
|
01:23:03.680 --> 01:23:07.440
|
|
who was working with Mike Baldwin who's still here and who's a professor in the school of pharmacy
|
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|
|
01:23:07.440 --> 01:23:13.840
|
|
and mass spectrometry so then Fred Cohn became involved and we began to think about models
|
|
|
|
01:23:13.840 --> 01:23:17.360
|
|
and the first thing that Fred did he said i wonder if this isn't really the case that
|
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|
|
01:23:17.360 --> 01:23:21.360
|
|
the normal form of the prion protein is full of these helical structures called alpha helices
|
|
|
|
01:23:21.440 --> 01:23:26.080
|
|
and that some of these are reduced and that there's a lot of beta sheet these beta strands
|
|
|
|
01:23:26.080 --> 01:23:31.520
|
|
these blue ribbons and at that point what we did was we knew that there was a lot of beta structure
|
|
|
|
01:23:31.520 --> 01:23:35.760
|
|
from other studies from our won't work and from that of other people we went it off and purified
|
|
|
|
01:23:35.760 --> 01:23:39.520
|
|
out of brains of animals the normal form of the prion protein and we found that Fred in fact was
|
|
|
|
01:23:39.520 --> 01:23:43.600
|
|
correct that there was very little beta structure and then more recently Tom James and his colleagues
|
|
|
|
01:23:43.600 --> 01:23:47.600
|
|
here with the help of peter right now i thought it was really hard to purify the prion proteins
|
|
|
|
01:23:47.680 --> 01:23:53.520
|
|
from animals with the disease and now he just says we're going to go do it and we found out
|
|
|
|
01:23:53.520 --> 01:24:01.440
|
|
that there's more beta sheets i don't know pain dyson scripts uh from protein that was made by
|
|
|
|
01:24:01.440 --> 01:24:05.520
|
|
genetic engineering and bacteria and determined its structure so here we're sort of halfway
|
|
|
|
01:24:05.520 --> 01:24:09.760
|
|
through the protein around residue 90 and then you see this long unstructured region then one the
|
|
|
|
01:24:09.760 --> 01:24:13.520
|
|
first alpha helix then more of this unstructured region with a small amount of beta structure
|
|
|
|
01:24:13.520 --> 01:24:18.320
|
|
than the second helix and the third helix and what's called the c-terminus now what we
|
|
|
|
01:24:18.320 --> 01:24:22.000
|
|
hypothesized was that the first helix and in fact we thought the first helix was made up of two
|
|
|
|
01:24:22.000 --> 01:24:25.840
|
|
this whole region was made up of two helices and we were wrong and Kurt Rudrich and Zurich showed us
|
|
|
|
01:24:25.840 --> 01:24:32.080
|
|
that we were wrong much to our dislike and unhappiness and so this was the model that we had for a number
|
|
|
|
01:24:32.080 --> 01:24:37.440
|
|
of years so what i've just told you is that when prpc is converted into prp scraping the protein
|
|
|
|
01:24:37.440 --> 01:24:42.560
|
|
undergoes a profound change in shape or as scientists call it confirmation prpc is rich in alpha helix
|
|
|
|
01:24:42.560 --> 01:24:50.480
|
|
whereas prp scraping is rich in beta structure now if you believe alpha fold and you believe
|
|
|
|
01:24:52.080 --> 01:24:58.480
|
|
people who study proteins alpha helix is something that you can predict from the sequence
|
|
|
|
01:24:59.040 --> 01:25:04.320
|
|
and a beta pleated sheet is something you can predict from the sequence and it's not very clear
|
|
|
|
01:25:04.320 --> 01:25:12.640
|
|
to me that those two are are not mutually exclusive i i was i was taught that those are kind of
|
|
|
|
01:25:12.640 --> 01:25:17.120
|
|
mutually exclusive in the sense of we don't really understand how proteins fold but we do
|
|
|
|
01:25:17.120 --> 01:25:23.280
|
|
understand that they have two general motifs that of an alpha helix and that of a beta pleated sheet
|
|
|
|
01:25:23.280 --> 01:25:29.520
|
|
and these two general motifs of course have very specific expression but these general motifs are
|
|
|
|
01:25:29.600 --> 01:25:34.320
|
|
used to construct or or or or build out some of these protein machines
|
|
|
|
01:25:36.160 --> 01:25:42.960
|
|
so the idea that one part of a protein could be both an alpha helix and a beta pleated sheet
|
|
|
|
01:25:42.960 --> 01:25:48.800
|
|
is already a very novel idea in my humble opinion and that i believe is what he's implying here
|
|
|
|
01:25:50.240 --> 01:25:53.680
|
|
and we went on to do some studies in collaboration with Dennis Burton at Scripps
|
|
|
|
01:25:54.240 --> 01:25:58.720
|
|
and this is the work of David Parrots who's still here at UCSF and what we did was to make
|
|
|
|
01:25:58.720 --> 01:26:02.320
|
|
antibodies that reacted to different regions of the prion protein so this is the three helix
|
|
|
|
01:26:02.320 --> 01:26:07.440
|
|
protein now what's really incredible about this is that antibodies are reacting to a three-dimensional
|
|
|
|
01:26:07.440 --> 01:26:12.880
|
|
static shape they don't necessarily react to only one and antibodies are very
|
|
|
|
01:26:15.520 --> 01:26:20.480
|
|
non-specific so it's very very would be very interesting to go back
|
|
|
|
01:26:21.360 --> 01:26:27.520
|
|
and see how these antibodies were raised they're raised to different epitopes as you can see here
|
|
|
|
01:26:27.520 --> 01:26:36.160
|
|
they are raised to epitopes that are about 22 amino acids this is 23 right this is no that's 30
|
|
|
|
01:26:36.880 --> 01:26:40.880
|
|
30 28 i don't know i can't do that math it's not very many
|
|
|
|
01:26:42.320 --> 01:26:47.120
|
|
so they're small epitopes presumably then what injected into a rabbit or something and then
|
|
|
|
01:26:47.120 --> 01:26:51.680
|
|
they take the plasma out and they get those antibodies and those antibodies although they
|
|
|
|
01:26:51.680 --> 01:26:56.880
|
|
were raised to that epitope aren't necessarily all going to be the same antibodies with the same
|
|
|
|
01:26:56.880 --> 01:27:02.720
|
|
specificity so unless they used a monoclonal antibody as they were made in the 90s that would be one
|
|
|
|
01:27:02.720 --> 01:27:10.240
|
|
thing to look at here and what they're doing is trying to identify using antibody binding whether
|
|
|
|
01:27:10.320 --> 01:27:14.000
|
|
or not particular structures are present or not present
|
|
|
|
01:27:21.200 --> 01:27:27.360
|
|
so i i just wanted to be sure you knew what they were doing with these antibodies
|
|
|
|
01:27:28.480 --> 01:27:32.640
|
|
let's see what he says hey this is helix a helix b and helix c that i showed you before
|
|
|
|
01:27:32.640 --> 01:27:41.360
|
|
and this is residue 90 and in this first region the the prion protein binds antibodies and the
|
|
|
|
01:27:41.360 --> 01:27:45.600
|
|
native form of the prion protein binds them quite well but the binding region or epitope disappears
|
|
|
|
01:27:45.600 --> 01:27:50.000
|
|
when prp scrape is formed so that was an important discovery and we use that information and we
|
|
|
|
01:27:50.000 --> 01:27:57.920
|
|
contrasted that with the green where but remember that when prion protein scrape is formed they can't
|
|
|
|
01:27:57.920 --> 01:28:05.200
|
|
separate it from the native prion so again these pluses and minuses are binding strength and whenever
|
|
|
|
01:28:05.200 --> 01:28:14.720
|
|
you have one key tip i would say that whenever you have a paper that wants to basically
|
|
|
|
01:28:16.160 --> 01:28:21.040
|
|
say take your word for it that okay we rate this as a three and that one is a two and this one is a
|
|
|
|
01:28:21.040 --> 01:28:27.360
|
|
one and that's a you know you should take it with a grain of salt here both the native form of PRPC
|
|
|
|
01:28:27.360 --> 01:28:31.680
|
|
and the native form of PRPC mine antibodies that's down here
|
|
|
|
01:28:32.160 --> 01:28:39.440
|
|
so these epitopes are regions so that's the second basic prince proof that the scrappy protein in
|
|
|
|
01:28:39.440 --> 01:28:46.240
|
|
its in its infectious form is a different shape than this one but in this preparation we're not
|
|
|
|
01:28:46.240 --> 01:28:53.120
|
|
sequencing a protein we're not starting with a pure protein in my i i don't think i don't know
|
|
|
|
01:28:53.120 --> 01:28:56.800
|
|
what we're doing here we got to we got to find that out we got to know we hope we're doing a
|
|
|
|
01:28:56.800 --> 01:29:04.720
|
|
pure protein here but is it a synthetically pure made protein is it a so that's again we have we
|
|
|
|
01:29:04.720 --> 01:29:10.560
|
|
have a lot of work to do here to find out where p values are essentially holding up what is a what
|
|
|
|
01:29:10.560 --> 01:29:17.360
|
|
is a what is a house that shouldn't be holding up we already have seen a couple examples of this
|
|
|
|
01:29:17.360 --> 01:29:22.880
|
|
like the brown and white mice thing with two amino acids difference and this protein means that
|
|
|
|
01:29:22.880 --> 01:29:27.440
|
|
the difference that we saw in the experiment had to do with those two amino acids that's the
|
|
|
|
01:29:27.440 --> 01:29:35.200
|
|
kind of assumptions that we're always talking about here these numbers plus two plus three is that
|
|
|
|
01:29:35.200 --> 01:29:42.720
|
|
really is he really saying that the native and the denatured pre-on scrappy protein are different
|
|
|
|
01:29:42.720 --> 01:29:47.520
|
|
by a factor of one out of three that's their scale i think that's down here
|
|
|
|
01:29:50.000 --> 01:29:54.640
|
|
so these epitopes are regions of the alpha helix rich precursor protein p rpc of
|
|
|
|
01:29:54.640 --> 01:29:59.360
|
|
prions are exposed but become buried when the protein is refolded into an infectious form
|
|
|
|
01:29:59.360 --> 01:30:08.000
|
|
p rpc scraping so why didn't they make um anybody see this is the problem i have with that
|
|
|
|
01:30:08.080 --> 01:30:16.720
|
|
they have the the protein here native pre-on protein scrappy so why don't they make antibodies
|
|
|
|
01:30:16.720 --> 01:30:25.600
|
|
to that why don't they make antibodies to the pre-on protein scrappy part and then show me
|
|
|
|
01:30:25.600 --> 01:30:31.360
|
|
that those antibodies bind pre-on scrappy but they don't bind this one why don't they do the
|
|
|
|
01:30:31.360 --> 01:30:37.680
|
|
reverse experiment apparently they have a pure form of this right otherwise you couldn't do this
|
|
|
|
01:30:38.640 --> 01:30:45.920
|
|
this assay so they raised antibodies to these epitopes but they don't raise antibodies to the
|
|
|
|
01:30:45.920 --> 01:30:50.560
|
|
epitopes of the pre-on scrappy because it's so hard to isolate or something i don't know
|
|
|
|
01:30:51.440 --> 01:30:55.920
|
|
they can't get it to form badly in a in a dish or using the right ribosome or what
|
|
|
|
01:30:57.280 --> 01:31:00.560
|
|
you see the problem here here
|
|
|
|
01:31:01.040 --> 01:31:08.480
|
|
so these epitopes are regions of the alpha helix rich precursor protein p rpc of prions are
|
|
|
|
01:31:08.480 --> 01:31:13.120
|
|
exposed but become buried when the protein is refolded into an infectious form p rpc scraping
|
|
|
|
01:31:15.680 --> 01:31:21.120
|
|
now when we treat with proteases and we cleave off the n terminal region and we form the ragged
|
|
|
|
01:31:21.120 --> 01:31:25.920
|
|
n terminus that i showed you that we sequenced and we call this prp 2730 this protein and this
|
|
|
|
01:31:25.920 --> 01:31:29.040
|
|
is the one that i showed you before where we've treated with protease so it's a little bit shorter
|
|
|
|
01:31:29.840 --> 01:31:33.440
|
|
that protein polymerizes into these rod shape structures that you see here
|
|
|
|
01:31:33.440 --> 01:31:40.400
|
|
so after they treat it with an enzyme it forms rod shape structures there's nothing to do with
|
|
|
|
01:31:40.400 --> 01:31:45.280
|
|
the physiology of it at all right this is an in vitro preparation with an in vitro result
|
|
|
|
01:31:46.400 --> 01:31:53.040
|
|
and yet somehow or another we got here by him saying something about the refolding
|
|
|
|
01:31:53.520 --> 01:32:00.480
|
|
now when we treat with proteases and we cleave off the n terminal region and we form the ragged
|
|
|
|
01:32:00.480 --> 01:32:05.280
|
|
n terminus that i showed you that we sequenced and we call this prp 2730 this protein and this
|
|
|
|
01:32:05.280 --> 01:32:08.400
|
|
is the one that i showed you before where we've treated with protease so it's a little bit shorter
|
|
|
|
01:32:09.680 --> 01:32:13.440
|
|
that protein polymerizes into these rod shape structures that you see here and there was a very
|
|
|
|
01:32:13.440 --> 01:32:17.360
|
|
famous man at Berkeley who died about 15 years ago roblie Williams was really the father of the
|
|
|
|
01:32:17.360 --> 01:32:20.960
|
|
electron microscopy of viruses and he was working with us at the time because i really thought we
|
|
|
|
01:32:21.040 --> 01:32:24.560
|
|
were going to find an interesting virus not a protein and we would see these rod shape structures
|
|
|
|
01:32:24.560 --> 01:32:29.280
|
|
and he called them rods some people would call them fibers and one day i guess we'd been working
|
|
|
|
01:32:29.280 --> 01:32:32.800
|
|
together for almost a year and a half i was looking at a book on the electron microscopy of proteins
|
|
|
|
01:32:32.800 --> 01:32:37.360
|
|
and all this looking like amyloid proteins now amyloid is a mammalian protein these are usually
|
|
|
|
01:32:37.360 --> 01:32:42.240
|
|
cathologically laid down in big fibers and there are many many diseases like alzheimer's disease
|
|
|
|
01:32:42.240 --> 01:32:47.200
|
|
where there are amyloid plaques of many of these proteins but so the first connection here so far
|
|
|
|
01:32:47.200 --> 01:32:52.400
|
|
seems to be that one microscopist called it a fibro and now they the people that study alzheimer's
|
|
|
|
01:32:52.400 --> 01:32:57.680
|
|
disease have also called the proteins involved in alzheimer's disease fibers and so now that's
|
|
|
|
01:32:57.680 --> 01:33:06.400
|
|
okay now they must be the same thing it turned out that this broke that what we were seeing was that
|
|
|
|
01:33:06.400 --> 01:33:10.720
|
|
the protein of the prion was forming amyloid and that's what these rods represent and then it formed
|
|
|
|
01:33:10.720 --> 01:33:14.640
|
|
plaques in the brain and i'll show you some of those plaques a little later now we also found
|
|
|
|
01:33:14.640 --> 01:33:18.480
|
|
and this is the work of holder willy who's here at UCSF along with the help of david agar and
|
|
|
|
01:33:18.480 --> 01:33:24.080
|
|
many others uh hana serven uh darlene groth that the protein forms these
|
|
|
|
01:33:25.680 --> 01:33:30.320
|
|
rods that the plaques a little later amyloid and that's what these were this broke that
|
|
|
|
01:33:30.320 --> 01:33:34.080
|
|
what we were seeing was that the protein of the prion was forming amyloid and that's what
|
|
|
|
01:33:34.080 --> 01:33:39.680
|
|
these rods represent the protein of the prion was forming amyloid so what i hear here is that prion
|
|
|
|
01:33:40.640 --> 01:33:47.440
|
|
protein is the sub component of amyloid is that what i'm hearing is that right
|
|
|
|
01:33:53.680 --> 01:34:00.320
|
|
hmm that's interesting that's that i didn't think that they were the same i didn't think
|
|
|
|
01:34:00.320 --> 01:34:05.280
|
|
they were the same protein i thought amyloid was a different protein um i didn't know that it
|
|
|
|
01:34:05.280 --> 01:34:09.360
|
|
was prion protein that was folded differently without an n-terminus because that's what he just
|
|
|
|
01:34:09.360 --> 01:34:15.760
|
|
said these are prion rods that are formed by the prion protein after you cleave its n-terminal
|
|
|
|
01:34:15.760 --> 01:34:22.960
|
|
off with proteases and these form under the microscope and now he seems to be indicating
|
|
|
|
01:34:22.960 --> 01:34:31.280
|
|
in 2002 that the amyloid plaques are actually prion protein did i not hear that did i not hear that
|
|
|
|
01:34:33.840 --> 01:34:38.560
|
|
on the electron microscopy of proteins and all this look like amyloid proteins now amyloid
|
|
|
|
01:34:38.560 --> 01:34:42.080
|
|
was is a mammalian protein these are usually depend logically uh laid down
|
|
|
|
01:34:42.080 --> 01:34:46.240
|
|
in big fibrils and there are many many diseases like Alzheimer's disease where there are amyloid
|
|
|
|
01:34:46.240 --> 01:34:57.520
|
|
many many diseases like Alzheimer's disease where amyloid plaques are laid down i don't
|
|
|
|
01:34:57.520 --> 01:35:02.000
|
|
don't know many many many diseases where amyloid plaques all this look like amyloid proteins
|
|
|
|
01:35:02.000 --> 01:35:06.480
|
|
now amyloid was is a mammalian protein these are usually Happyl logically uh laid down in
|
|
|
|
01:35:06.480 --> 01:35:08.640
|
|
is like Alzheimer's disease, where there are amyloid plaques,
|
|
|
|
01:35:08.640 --> 01:35:09.560
|
|
so many of these proteins.
|
|
|
|
01:35:09.560 --> 01:35:12.480
|
|
But it turned out that this broke that what we were seeing
|
|
|
|
01:35:12.480 --> 01:35:15.120
|
|
was that the protein of the prion was forming amyloid,
|
|
|
|
01:35:15.120 --> 01:35:16.720
|
|
and that's what these rods represent.
|
|
|
|
01:35:16.720 --> 01:35:18.120
|
|
And then it formed plaques in the brain,
|
|
|
|
01:35:18.120 --> 01:35:20.640
|
|
and I'll show you some of those plaques a little later.
|
|
|
|
01:35:20.640 --> 01:35:22.760
|
|
Now, we also found, and this is the work of Holger-Willy,
|
|
|
|
01:35:22.760 --> 01:35:25.200
|
|
who's here at UCSF, along with the help of David Agard
|
|
|
|
01:35:25.200 --> 01:35:28.080
|
|
and many others, Hana Sermon, Darlene Groth,
|
|
|
|
01:35:28.080 --> 01:35:33.040
|
|
that the protein forms these rods,
|
|
|
|
01:35:33.040 --> 01:35:34.240
|
|
and then at one end, we sometimes
|
|
|
|
01:35:34.240 --> 01:35:36.000
|
|
see these two-dimensional crystals.
|
|
|
|
01:35:36.000 --> 01:35:37.920
|
|
And we don't know whether the crystals form first,
|
|
|
|
01:35:37.920 --> 01:35:39.760
|
|
and from that, the rods form, or the rods
|
|
|
|
01:35:39.760 --> 01:35:43.840
|
|
begin to dissolve, and we form the crystals on the surface.
|
|
|
|
01:35:43.840 --> 01:35:46.160
|
|
But we were able to use those images of the crystals
|
|
|
|
01:35:46.160 --> 01:35:48.600
|
|
and then do what's called correlation averaging.
|
|
|
|
01:35:48.600 --> 01:35:50.800
|
|
Now, keep in mind, this is what Robert Malone
|
|
|
|
01:35:50.800 --> 01:35:53.680
|
|
purports to have simulatedly done at the beginning
|
|
|
|
01:35:53.680 --> 01:35:58.240
|
|
of the pandemic for the three CL protease of the coronavirus.
|
|
|
|
01:35:58.240 --> 01:36:04.480
|
|
He made a virtual X-ray crystallography model of that enzyme
|
|
|
|
01:36:04.480 --> 01:36:07.920
|
|
and then used that three-dimensional X-ray crystallography
|
|
|
|
01:36:07.920 --> 01:36:12.400
|
|
model to scan all known pharmaceuticals and nutraceuticals
|
|
|
|
01:36:12.400 --> 01:36:15.640
|
|
in the FDA catalog in less than three weeks
|
|
|
|
01:36:15.640 --> 01:36:21.240
|
|
to identify ivermectin, fluvoxamine, silicoxib,
|
|
|
|
01:36:21.240 --> 01:36:28.280
|
|
and remdesivir has four potential repurposed drugs
|
|
|
|
01:36:28.280 --> 01:36:30.760
|
|
to respond to the pandemic.
|
|
|
|
01:36:30.760 --> 01:36:39.320
|
|
He spun up his volunteer team and developed an X-ray crystallography
|
|
|
|
01:36:39.320 --> 01:36:42.160
|
|
model, computer-generated, similar to what
|
|
|
|
01:36:42.160 --> 01:36:46.880
|
|
is being described here, but just a computer-generated version
|
|
|
|
01:36:46.880 --> 01:36:50.480
|
|
of it, of the three CL protease and then
|
|
|
|
01:36:50.480 --> 01:36:55.320
|
|
scanned all known drugs and pharmaceuticals
|
|
|
|
01:36:55.320 --> 01:36:58.920
|
|
using the domain program, which was a DITRA program run
|
|
|
|
01:36:58.920 --> 01:37:04.680
|
|
by his friend, David Hone, and came up
|
|
|
|
01:37:04.680 --> 01:37:07.720
|
|
with four candidate drugs, of which at least one of them
|
|
|
|
01:37:07.720 --> 01:37:14.400
|
|
was tested by Steve Kirsch, through his early treatment
|
|
|
|
01:37:14.400 --> 01:37:18.720
|
|
fund, something something before he started his VRSF fund.
|
|
|
|
01:37:23.000 --> 01:37:25.960
|
|
I mean, that's neither here nor there with regard
|
|
|
|
01:37:25.960 --> 01:37:27.320
|
|
to what's happening here.
|
|
|
|
01:37:27.320 --> 01:37:30.160
|
|
This is just to say that when you can crystallize a protein,
|
|
|
|
01:37:30.160 --> 01:37:33.160
|
|
then you can take high-resolution pictures of it
|
|
|
|
01:37:33.160 --> 01:37:37.440
|
|
and get some idea of the structure of the protein
|
|
|
|
01:37:37.440 --> 01:37:43.240
|
|
because the crystal is a ever-repeating lattice of a pure protein.
|
|
|
|
01:37:43.240 --> 01:37:47.480
|
|
So this is a ever-repeating lattice of the prion protein,
|
|
|
|
01:37:47.480 --> 01:37:50.720
|
|
not the prionscrapi protein, which they still
|
|
|
|
01:37:50.720 --> 01:37:54.240
|
|
can't produce separately from the prion protein, which
|
|
|
|
01:37:54.240 --> 01:37:57.040
|
|
is interesting because the prion protein is not
|
|
|
|
01:37:57.040 --> 01:37:59.200
|
|
an infectious protein.
|
|
|
|
01:37:59.200 --> 01:38:00.600
|
|
And then we can average some more.
|
|
|
|
01:38:00.600 --> 01:38:02.880
|
|
So these are all imaging techniques.
|
|
|
|
01:38:02.880 --> 01:38:04.240
|
|
And we can develop these power spectra
|
|
|
|
01:38:04.240 --> 01:38:06.200
|
|
and get very, very detailed images.
|
|
|
|
01:38:06.200 --> 01:38:08.160
|
|
And so we went through a lot of this.
|
|
|
|
01:38:08.160 --> 01:38:09.880
|
|
And eventually, we're able to show
|
|
|
|
01:38:09.880 --> 01:38:12.480
|
|
that a piece of the prion protein in the middle of the protein
|
|
|
|
01:38:12.480 --> 01:38:14.680
|
|
is found in the center in these black regions
|
|
|
|
01:38:14.680 --> 01:38:18.160
|
|
and that the sugar chains are found around the edges
|
|
|
|
01:38:18.160 --> 01:38:19.160
|
|
of the black regions.
|
|
|
|
01:38:19.160 --> 01:38:20.960
|
|
And that gave rise to two different models.
|
|
|
|
01:38:20.960 --> 01:38:23.200
|
|
What we call a trimer of dimers, so there
|
|
|
|
01:38:23.200 --> 01:38:26.560
|
|
are six here, or simply a trimer, as shown here.
|
|
|
|
01:38:26.560 --> 01:38:28.560
|
|
And this is the right-handed model.
|
|
|
|
01:38:28.560 --> 01:38:31.520
|
|
This is the left-handed model.
|
|
|
|
01:38:31.520 --> 01:38:33.080
|
|
And here, you simply see one of these now.
|
|
|
|
01:38:33.080 --> 01:38:34.440
|
|
It's a much different-looking structure
|
|
|
|
01:38:34.440 --> 01:38:35.840
|
|
for the model of prp-scrapi.
|
|
|
|
01:38:35.840 --> 01:38:37.080
|
|
It has what are called beta helices.
|
|
|
|
01:38:37.080 --> 01:38:39.080
|
|
So this beta structure is now in a helix.
|
|
|
|
01:38:39.080 --> 01:38:40.080
|
|
This is an alpha helix.
|
|
|
|
01:38:40.080 --> 01:38:41.200
|
|
This is a beta helix.
|
|
|
|
01:38:41.200 --> 01:38:43.740
|
|
This is PRPC, as I talked about earlier, with helix A,
|
|
|
|
01:38:43.740 --> 01:38:46.400
|
|
helix B, and helix C. Here, you see part of helix B
|
|
|
|
01:38:46.400 --> 01:38:48.240
|
|
preserved, and all of helix C preserved.
|
|
|
|
01:38:48.240 --> 01:38:50.840
|
|
And the rest of this now is changed into beta helix.
|
|
|
|
01:38:50.840 --> 01:38:51.800
|
|
This is a current model.
|
|
|
|
01:38:51.800 --> 01:38:52.920
|
|
This is what I was thinking about this.
|
|
|
|
01:38:52.920 --> 01:38:56.360
|
|
It may or may not be right.
|
|
|
|
01:38:56.360 --> 01:38:58.280
|
|
In the way we obtained these images
|
|
|
|
01:38:58.280 --> 01:38:59.040
|
|
was using what we call it.
|
|
|
|
01:38:59.040 --> 01:39:03.120
|
|
Now remember, he doesn't have the crystal of this.
|
|
|
|
01:39:03.120 --> 01:39:07.880
|
|
So I don't really know what their molecular basis for assuming
|
|
|
|
01:39:07.880 --> 01:39:08.840
|
|
there's beta.
|
|
|
|
01:39:08.840 --> 01:39:10.160
|
|
That's a beta-pleated sheet.
|
|
|
|
01:39:10.160 --> 01:39:11.520
|
|
He called it a beta helix.
|
|
|
|
01:39:11.520 --> 01:39:13.000
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
|
|
01:39:13.000 --> 01:39:14.920
|
|
I thought you called that a beta-pleated sheet.
|
|
|
|
01:39:14.920 --> 01:39:15.640
|
|
I could be wrong.
|
|
|
|
01:39:15.640 --> 01:39:17.880
|
|
There could be also a beta helix.
|
|
|
|
01:39:17.880 --> 01:39:19.720
|
|
I mean, I'm not a protein guy.
|
|
|
|
01:39:19.720 --> 01:39:20.800
|
|
This is the current model.
|
|
|
|
01:39:20.800 --> 01:39:22.000
|
|
This is what I was thinking about this.
|
|
|
|
01:39:22.000 --> 01:39:25.360
|
|
It may or may not be right.
|
|
|
|
01:39:25.360 --> 01:39:27.320
|
|
In the way we obtained these images
|
|
|
|
01:39:27.320 --> 01:39:29.440
|
|
was using what we call the old electron microscope, which
|
|
|
|
01:39:29.440 --> 01:39:30.600
|
|
means it's no longer in service.
|
|
|
|
01:39:30.600 --> 01:39:32.000
|
|
But I'd simply show you this.
|
|
|
|
01:39:32.000 --> 01:39:33.720
|
|
And now what we're doing is working
|
|
|
|
01:39:33.720 --> 01:39:36.640
|
|
with a new microscope, which was purchased
|
|
|
|
01:39:36.640 --> 01:39:38.480
|
|
with the help of the Fairchild Foundation.
|
|
|
|
01:39:38.480 --> 01:39:40.240
|
|
This is a $2 million instrument.
|
|
|
|
01:39:40.240 --> 01:39:42.000
|
|
And you can maybe understand all this new detail that
|
|
|
|
01:39:42.000 --> 01:39:44.280
|
|
wasn't there in the last slide.
|
|
|
|
01:39:44.280 --> 01:39:46.120
|
|
So you can see that it's really essentially blank.
|
|
|
|
01:39:46.120 --> 01:39:48.200
|
|
And now we begin to see all kinds of information.
|
|
|
|
01:39:48.200 --> 01:39:51.240
|
|
So we're very optimistic that this will yield much more
|
|
|
|
01:39:51.240 --> 01:39:53.120
|
|
structure in the near future.
|
|
|
|
01:39:53.120 --> 01:39:54.680
|
|
So prions are composed of prion proteins
|
|
|
|
01:39:54.680 --> 01:39:55.920
|
|
that are rich in beta structure.
|
|
|
|
01:39:55.920 --> 01:39:58.040
|
|
And we don't know whether this is beta helix or beta sheet.
|
|
|
|
01:39:58.040 --> 01:39:59.320
|
|
But all the evidence so far argues
|
|
|
|
01:39:59.320 --> 01:40:02.320
|
|
for this new model of beta helix.
|
|
|
|
01:40:02.320 --> 01:40:04.960
|
|
So there are beta helix and beta sheet, according to that,
|
|
|
|
01:40:04.960 --> 01:40:07.560
|
|
which is good to know.
|
|
|
|
01:40:07.560 --> 01:40:10.000
|
|
I still don't think he's provided a lot of evidence
|
|
|
|
01:40:10.000 --> 01:40:15.040
|
|
that prion in an alternate form can cause other proteins
|
|
|
|
01:40:15.040 --> 01:40:16.840
|
|
to form that way yet, right?
|
|
|
|
01:40:16.840 --> 01:40:18.640
|
|
We haven't even been able to establish
|
|
|
|
01:40:18.640 --> 01:40:21.160
|
|
that prion scrappy exists as a separate protein.
|
|
|
|
01:40:21.160 --> 01:40:24.520
|
|
He's only shown as a crystal of prion protein
|
|
|
|
01:40:24.520 --> 01:40:25.920
|
|
in its natural form.
|
|
|
|
01:40:25.920 --> 01:40:27.680
|
|
Keep that in mind.
|
|
|
|
01:40:27.680 --> 01:40:29.480
|
|
When the prion protein PRPC is synthesized,
|
|
|
|
01:40:29.480 --> 01:40:30.640
|
|
it's made deep in the cell in what
|
|
|
|
01:40:30.640 --> 01:40:31.800
|
|
is called the endoplasmic reticulum.
|
|
|
|
01:40:31.800 --> 01:40:32.320
|
|
Here we go.
|
|
|
|
01:40:32.320 --> 01:40:34.120
|
|
It travels through what is called the Golgi apparatus
|
|
|
|
01:40:34.120 --> 01:40:35.160
|
|
out to the surface.
|
|
|
|
01:40:35.160 --> 01:40:36.920
|
|
And on the surface in these what are called
|
|
|
|
01:40:36.920 --> 01:40:39.360
|
|
rafts or cholesterol rich microdomains,
|
|
|
|
01:40:39.360 --> 01:40:41.040
|
|
where there's a lot of cholesterol on the surface
|
|
|
|
01:40:41.040 --> 01:40:43.960
|
|
in these little regions, the normal form of the prion
|
|
|
|
01:40:43.960 --> 01:40:46.400
|
|
protein PRPC is converted into PRP scrappy.
|
|
|
|
01:40:46.400 --> 01:40:48.120
|
|
And then it travels deep into the cell again
|
|
|
|
01:40:48.120 --> 01:40:49.600
|
|
and all the way down into what are called bicosomes.
|
|
|
|
01:40:49.600 --> 01:40:52.840
|
|
So does this look like anything that you've seen before,
|
|
|
|
01:40:52.840 --> 01:40:56.640
|
|
another cartoon of some intracellular biological process
|
|
|
|
01:40:56.640 --> 01:41:00.960
|
|
is just to be assumed to work exactly like it's drawn
|
|
|
|
01:41:00.960 --> 01:41:03.840
|
|
because there's a guy with a laser pointer shining on it?
|
|
|
|
01:41:06.480 --> 01:41:08.880
|
|
Because nothing that we've talked about so far
|
|
|
|
01:41:08.880 --> 01:41:13.560
|
|
in this discussion has led us to believe
|
|
|
|
01:41:13.560 --> 01:41:16.680
|
|
that this part of this thing is like real.
|
|
|
|
01:41:16.680 --> 01:41:18.280
|
|
It's an assumption.
|
|
|
|
01:41:18.280 --> 01:41:20.760
|
|
The cartoon is an assumption.
|
|
|
|
01:41:20.760 --> 01:41:22.920
|
|
And they're not going to do very many experiments
|
|
|
|
01:41:22.920 --> 01:41:26.320
|
|
to test any predictions that this thing might make.
|
|
|
|
01:41:26.320 --> 01:41:29.320
|
|
They're going to test to see if they can find data
|
|
|
|
01:41:29.320 --> 01:41:31.160
|
|
which fits this cartoon.
|
|
|
|
01:41:31.160 --> 01:41:32.960
|
|
See, it's converted into PRP scrappy.
|
|
|
|
01:41:32.960 --> 01:41:34.680
|
|
And then it travels deep into the cell again
|
|
|
|
01:41:34.680 --> 01:41:36.400
|
|
and all the way down into what are called bicosomes.
|
|
|
|
01:41:36.400 --> 01:41:40.000
|
|
And of course, this is a part of the biology
|
|
|
|
01:41:40.000 --> 01:41:42.000
|
|
that they want you to ignore that there
|
|
|
|
01:41:42.000 --> 01:41:45.400
|
|
are these lipid rafts that are in our membrane
|
|
|
|
01:41:45.400 --> 01:41:47.440
|
|
which are cholesterol-rich regions
|
|
|
|
01:41:47.440 --> 01:41:52.360
|
|
where most of the intracellular extracellular communication
|
|
|
|
01:41:52.360 --> 01:41:54.560
|
|
and trafficking occurs.
|
|
|
|
01:41:54.560 --> 01:41:56.320
|
|
And so it's one of the reasons why,
|
|
|
|
01:41:56.320 --> 01:41:58.840
|
|
besides the fact that myelin in your brain
|
|
|
|
01:41:58.840 --> 01:42:00.720
|
|
is made up of a lot of cholesterol,
|
|
|
|
01:42:00.720 --> 01:42:04.280
|
|
it's one of the wonderful reasons why statins are a terrible
|
|
|
|
01:42:04.280 --> 01:42:08.280
|
|
and that reducing cholesterol is just a terrible health motive
|
|
|
|
01:42:09.800 --> 01:42:11.520
|
|
that could have only been put out there
|
|
|
|
01:42:11.520 --> 01:42:14.400
|
|
by people who are idiots or people who are malevolent.
|
|
|
|
01:42:16.400 --> 01:42:19.400
|
|
And this is really feeling like covering up
|
|
|
|
01:42:19.400 --> 01:42:22.360
|
|
for people that are malevolent more than anything else.
|
|
|
|
01:42:22.360 --> 01:42:26.480
|
|
This doesn't feel like a legitimate biological story
|
|
|
|
01:42:26.480 --> 01:42:28.840
|
|
but it feels like mythology to me.
|
|
|
|
01:42:28.840 --> 01:42:30.720
|
|
Where proteins are normally degraded
|
|
|
|
01:42:30.720 --> 01:42:32.040
|
|
but PRP scrappy persists.
|
|
|
|
01:42:32.040 --> 01:42:33.400
|
|
But it doesn't persist forever as I'll show you
|
|
|
|
01:42:33.400 --> 01:42:35.000
|
|
a little bit later and it's changed the way
|
|
|
|
01:42:35.000 --> 01:42:36.000
|
|
we think about this.
|
|
|
|
01:42:39.000 --> 01:42:40.280
|
|
So the precursor of the prion
|
|
|
|
01:42:40.280 --> 01:42:42.000
|
|
is an alpha helix-rich protein PRPC
|
|
|
|
01:42:42.000 --> 01:42:43.520
|
|
that's synthesized in what's called the ER
|
|
|
|
01:42:43.520 --> 01:42:45.240
|
|
and a plasma-criticulum of the cell.
|
|
|
|
01:42:45.240 --> 01:42:47.200
|
|
The infectious form of the prion protein PRP scrappy
|
|
|
|
01:42:47.200 --> 01:42:48.880
|
|
of the prion is rich in beta structure
|
|
|
|
01:42:48.880 --> 01:42:51.680
|
|
and it is formed from PRPC on the surface of the cell
|
|
|
|
01:42:51.680 --> 01:42:53.360
|
|
in these cholesterol-rich micro domains.
|
|
|
|
01:42:53.360 --> 01:42:55.120
|
|
So this, all of this right here,
|
|
|
|
01:42:55.120 --> 01:42:57.840
|
|
besides the cholesterol-rich micro domains,
|
|
|
|
01:42:57.840 --> 01:43:00.360
|
|
all of this here is based on very, very little evidence,
|
|
|
|
01:43:00.360 --> 01:43:02.840
|
|
sometimes only one paper, just keep that in mind.
|
|
|
|
01:43:05.520 --> 01:43:07.760
|
|
Now recently we discovered that the prion protein
|
|
|
|
01:43:07.760 --> 01:43:09.680
|
|
was around a long, long time ago
|
|
|
|
01:43:09.680 --> 01:43:12.880
|
|
and that it has a cousin, actually a sister or a brother.
|
|
|
|
01:43:12.880 --> 01:43:14.200
|
|
It was an ancient gene duplication
|
|
|
|
01:43:14.200 --> 01:43:16.640
|
|
before men and mice diverged.
|
|
|
|
01:43:17.720 --> 01:43:19.960
|
|
And with the help of Lee Hood and David Westaway
|
|
|
|
01:43:19.960 --> 01:43:20.760
|
|
who was here at the time
|
|
|
|
01:43:20.760 --> 01:43:22.320
|
|
and later Richard Moore who came from Edinburgh
|
|
|
|
01:43:22.320 --> 01:43:25.000
|
|
and Patrick Tremblay who came from Montreal,
|
|
|
|
01:43:25.000 --> 01:43:26.560
|
|
we were able to unravel this mystery.
|
|
|
|
01:43:26.560 --> 01:43:28.240
|
|
So here's the prion protein gene
|
|
|
|
01:43:28.240 --> 01:43:30.320
|
|
and 16,000 bases downstream,
|
|
|
|
01:43:30.320 --> 01:43:31.680
|
|
we predicted there was a new gene
|
|
|
|
01:43:31.680 --> 01:43:33.520
|
|
which would be for the doppel protein.
|
|
|
|
01:43:34.600 --> 01:43:36.480
|
|
And when we began to look at this gene, it became...
|
|
|
|
01:43:36.480 --> 01:43:37.440
|
|
And so what are they doing?
|
|
|
|
01:43:37.440 --> 01:43:39.240
|
|
They're looking for gene homology, right?
|
|
|
|
01:43:39.240 --> 01:43:40.800
|
|
And so this could be a duplication,
|
|
|
|
01:43:40.800 --> 01:43:42.080
|
|
this could be any number of things
|
|
|
|
01:43:42.080 --> 01:43:43.800
|
|
that happens in our genome.
|
|
|
|
01:43:43.800 --> 01:43:46.040
|
|
But they're starting to make an argument
|
|
|
|
01:43:46.040 --> 01:43:50.360
|
|
that some of these motifs may or may not be other proteins
|
|
|
|
01:43:50.360 --> 01:43:55.040
|
|
in the genome with potential to be infectious.
|
|
|
|
01:43:55.040 --> 01:43:57.120
|
|
And clear that there were many common features
|
|
|
|
01:43:57.120 --> 01:43:58.800
|
|
and that helix A existed in both,
|
|
|
|
01:43:58.800 --> 01:43:59.920
|
|
helix B existed in both,
|
|
|
|
01:43:59.920 --> 01:44:01.560
|
|
and helix C existed in both.
|
|
|
|
01:44:01.560 --> 01:44:02.760
|
|
But there were differences.
|
|
|
|
01:44:02.760 --> 01:44:05.000
|
|
When we looked at individual amino acids one by one,
|
|
|
|
01:44:05.000 --> 01:44:08.240
|
|
there were only 25% that shared sequence homology
|
|
|
|
01:44:08.240 --> 01:44:09.600
|
|
that were identical.
|
|
|
|
01:44:09.600 --> 01:44:10.920
|
|
But when we looked at the structure,
|
|
|
|
01:44:10.920 --> 01:44:13.160
|
|
and this is with the work of Jane Dyson and Peter Wright
|
|
|
|
01:44:13.320 --> 01:44:14.240
|
|
and they're post-cycled.
|
|
|
|
01:44:14.240 --> 01:44:16.840
|
|
It's one existed in both and helix C existed in both.
|
|
|
|
01:44:16.840 --> 01:44:17.640
|
|
But there were differences.
|
|
|
|
01:44:17.640 --> 01:44:22.000
|
|
So helix C and helix B existed in both.
|
|
|
|
01:44:22.000 --> 01:44:23.480
|
|
Listen to him say it.
|
|
|
|
01:44:23.480 --> 01:44:25.440
|
|
And when we began to look at this gene
|
|
|
|
01:44:25.440 --> 01:44:27.800
|
|
it became clear that there were many common features
|
|
|
|
01:44:27.800 --> 01:44:29.480
|
|
and that helix A existed in both,
|
|
|
|
01:44:29.480 --> 01:44:30.560
|
|
helix B existed in both,
|
|
|
|
01:44:30.560 --> 01:44:32.040
|
|
and helix C existed in both.
|
|
|
|
01:44:32.040 --> 01:44:33.360
|
|
Okay, they exist in both.
|
|
|
|
01:44:33.360 --> 01:44:36.600
|
|
So both of these proteins apparently have the same sequence
|
|
|
|
01:44:36.600 --> 01:44:38.560
|
|
because otherwise that alpha helix,
|
|
|
|
01:44:38.560 --> 01:44:40.800
|
|
you wouldn't call it alpha helix A
|
|
|
|
01:44:40.800 --> 01:44:43.040
|
|
if it's not the same sequence of amino acids
|
|
|
|
01:44:43.080 --> 01:44:45.680
|
|
because it would be a different alpha helix, right?
|
|
|
|
01:44:45.680 --> 01:44:46.840
|
|
But there were differences.
|
|
|
|
01:44:46.840 --> 01:44:49.080
|
|
When we looked at individual amino acids one by one,
|
|
|
|
01:44:49.080 --> 01:44:52.480
|
|
there were only 25% that shared sequence homology.
|
|
|
|
01:44:52.480 --> 01:44:54.800
|
|
So if there are only 25 amino acids
|
|
|
|
01:44:54.800 --> 01:44:56.320
|
|
that share sequence homology,
|
|
|
|
01:44:56.320 --> 01:45:00.200
|
|
then how can you call it sequence the same sequence?
|
|
|
|
01:45:00.200 --> 01:45:02.840
|
|
It's not alpha helix A.
|
|
|
|
01:45:02.840 --> 01:45:04.160
|
|
It's not alpha helix B.
|
|
|
|
01:45:04.160 --> 01:45:05.780
|
|
It's not alpha helix C.
|
|
|
|
01:45:07.520 --> 01:45:10.560
|
|
Because we know that proteins use these motifs,
|
|
|
|
01:45:10.560 --> 01:45:14.880
|
|
alpha helix, beta pleated sheet, beta helix,
|
|
|
|
01:45:14.880 --> 01:45:17.040
|
|
as standard motifs.
|
|
|
|
01:45:17.040 --> 01:45:19.680
|
|
They're not so different these 20 amino acids
|
|
|
|
01:45:19.680 --> 01:45:22.200
|
|
that they don't fold similarly
|
|
|
|
01:45:22.200 --> 01:45:25.000
|
|
depending on their main attribute,
|
|
|
|
01:45:25.000 --> 01:45:29.440
|
|
which is hydrophobicity or hydrophilic.
|
|
|
|
01:45:29.440 --> 01:45:32.440
|
|
They either like to be near the polar solvents of water
|
|
|
|
01:45:32.440 --> 01:45:34.160
|
|
or they wanna fold away from it.
|
|
|
|
01:45:37.320 --> 01:45:39.520
|
|
And so again, those amino acids
|
|
|
|
01:45:39.520 --> 01:45:41.520
|
|
make a huge difference to the propensity
|
|
|
|
01:45:41.520 --> 01:45:45.120
|
|
by which that alpha helix curls up tightly away from water
|
|
|
|
01:45:45.120 --> 01:45:47.200
|
|
and bends to the left or the right.
|
|
|
|
01:45:47.200 --> 01:45:49.520
|
|
These differences are huge.
|
|
|
|
01:45:49.520 --> 01:45:53.240
|
|
And he says there's only 25% homology between these,
|
|
|
|
01:45:53.240 --> 01:45:57.200
|
|
but I mean, we'll still call them alpha helix A, B and C.
|
|
|
|
01:45:57.200 --> 01:46:00.880
|
|
Holy cow, this goes against the actual principle,
|
|
|
|
01:46:00.880 --> 01:46:03.920
|
|
the very foundational understanding that we have
|
|
|
|
01:46:03.920 --> 01:46:08.000
|
|
that the amino acid sequence has something directly to do
|
|
|
|
01:46:08.000 --> 01:46:12.760
|
|
with the potential structure and function of the protein.
|
|
|
|
01:46:12.760 --> 01:46:14.080
|
|
We're identical.
|
|
|
|
01:46:14.080 --> 01:46:15.400
|
|
But when we looked at the structure,
|
|
|
|
01:46:15.400 --> 01:46:17.680
|
|
and this is with the work of Jane Dyson and Peter Wright
|
|
|
|
01:46:17.680 --> 01:46:19.920
|
|
and their postdoc, Wapping Mo, at Scripps,
|
|
|
|
01:46:19.920 --> 01:46:21.480
|
|
comparing this to the structure done in Zurich
|
|
|
|
01:46:21.480 --> 01:46:23.000
|
|
by Kurt Vootrick that I mentioned earlier.
|
|
|
|
01:46:23.000 --> 01:46:25.440
|
|
So this is mouse doppel and mouse PRP.
|
|
|
|
01:46:25.440 --> 01:46:27.440
|
|
So what you see is that over time,
|
|
|
|
01:46:27.440 --> 01:46:30.760
|
|
the structures were preserved, here's helix A, helix A,
|
|
|
|
01:46:30.760 --> 01:46:34.040
|
|
helix B, helix C, helix B, and helix C.
|
|
|
|
01:46:34.040 --> 01:46:36.200
|
|
And yet, the sequence is diverged enormously.
|
|
|
|
01:46:36.240 --> 01:46:38.040
|
|
75% of the residues are different,
|
|
|
|
01:46:38.040 --> 01:46:40.000
|
|
but the overall structures are extremely similar.
|
|
|
|
01:46:40.000 --> 01:46:42.320
|
|
They're not arguing that those overall structures
|
|
|
|
01:46:42.320 --> 01:46:46.120
|
|
would suggest that their function is identical, but they are.
|
|
|
|
01:46:46.120 --> 01:46:47.640
|
|
Don't you see they are?
|
|
|
|
01:46:50.400 --> 01:46:52.480
|
|
Even though they know so little,
|
|
|
|
01:46:52.480 --> 01:46:55.360
|
|
they are already making that argument.
|
|
|
|
01:46:55.360 --> 01:46:56.840
|
|
We don't know what either of these proteins does.
|
|
|
|
01:46:56.840 --> 01:46:58.400
|
|
We don't know the function of either protein.
|
|
|
|
01:46:58.400 --> 01:46:59.960
|
|
Ha, ha, we don't know the function
|
|
|
|
01:46:59.960 --> 01:47:02.880
|
|
of either of these proteins in 2002.
|
|
|
|
01:47:02.880 --> 01:47:05.440
|
|
Now let's turn to the human preon diseases for a moment.
|
|
|
|
01:47:07.200 --> 01:47:08.720
|
|
The sporadic form of these diseases
|
|
|
|
01:47:08.720 --> 01:47:09.960
|
|
is called Croites Valley Aqua disease.
|
|
|
|
01:47:09.960 --> 01:47:12.760
|
|
And this accounts for 85% of all preon disease.
|
|
|
|
01:47:12.760 --> 01:47:15.480
|
|
The inherited forms account for 10% to 15%
|
|
|
|
01:47:15.480 --> 01:47:17.120
|
|
and are called Gerson stories are shanker disease,
|
|
|
|
01:47:17.120 --> 01:47:19.200
|
|
familial CJD, and fatal familial insomnia.
|
|
|
|
01:47:19.200 --> 01:47:20.520
|
|
These are autosomal dominant diseases,
|
|
|
|
01:47:20.520 --> 01:47:22.000
|
|
so half of the family members are afflicted
|
|
|
|
01:47:22.000 --> 01:47:23.080
|
|
if they live long enough.
|
|
|
|
01:47:23.080 --> 01:47:25.880
|
|
And the infectious forms of these diseases are very rare.
|
|
|
|
01:47:25.880 --> 01:47:28.120
|
|
And they include kuru among new-getting natives.
|
|
|
|
01:47:28.120 --> 01:47:31.080
|
|
It was transmitted by ritualistic cannibalism.
|
|
|
|
01:47:31.080 --> 01:47:33.240
|
|
Iatrogenic Croites Valley Aqua disease caused by growth hormone
|
|
|
|
01:47:33.240 --> 01:47:34.680
|
|
derived from human to doitaries.
|
|
|
|
01:47:34.680 --> 01:47:37.520
|
|
And I'll talk much more about new variant CJD in Britain.
|
|
|
|
01:47:37.520 --> 01:47:39.760
|
|
See, so they gave growth hormone to people
|
|
|
|
01:47:39.760 --> 01:47:42.440
|
|
and then they got CJD.
|
|
|
|
01:47:42.440 --> 01:47:45.120
|
|
So is that an immune reaction or is that a protein
|
|
|
|
01:47:45.120 --> 01:47:46.720
|
|
that you can only have one of?
|
|
|
|
01:47:53.800 --> 01:47:57.360
|
|
I don't know, I'm still skeptical
|
|
|
|
01:47:57.360 --> 01:47:59.600
|
|
of these things all being one phenomenon
|
|
|
|
01:47:59.600 --> 01:48:02.800
|
|
that is protein misfolding out of control.
|
|
|
|
01:48:02.800 --> 01:48:04.520
|
|
Hormone derived from human to doitaries.
|
|
|
|
01:48:04.520 --> 01:48:08.680
|
|
And I'll talk much more about new variant CJD in Britain.
|
|
|
|
01:48:08.680 --> 01:48:10.760
|
|
Sporadic CJD is a disease of older people.
|
|
|
|
01:48:10.760 --> 01:48:12.320
|
|
So the peak is around 70 years of age.
|
|
|
|
01:48:12.320 --> 01:48:14.080
|
|
This is Larry Schoenberger's data from the CDC.
|
|
|
|
01:48:14.080 --> 01:48:15.960
|
|
It's a 20-year experience in the United States.
|
|
|
|
01:48:15.960 --> 01:48:19.400
|
|
So very few young people develop sporadic CJD.
|
|
|
|
01:48:19.400 --> 01:48:20.880
|
|
Now, the genetic forms of this disease
|
|
|
|
01:48:20.880 --> 01:48:23.000
|
|
have a fascinating history because the first reports
|
|
|
|
01:48:23.000 --> 01:48:25.360
|
|
of Croites Valley Aqua disease were in 1921.
|
|
|
|
01:48:25.360 --> 01:48:26.760
|
|
And 10 years later, the first pedigree
|
|
|
|
01:48:26.760 --> 01:48:28.560
|
|
was brought of familial CJD.
|
|
|
|
01:48:28.560 --> 01:48:30.840
|
|
And in 1973, Ray Rus was currently
|
|
|
|
01:48:30.840 --> 01:48:32.720
|
|
chair in neurology at the University of Chicago,
|
|
|
|
01:48:32.720 --> 01:48:34.280
|
|
working with Carlton Gajosecond Joe Gibbs
|
|
|
|
01:48:34.280 --> 01:48:36.600
|
|
at the NIH, who did all the early work on Kuru.
|
|
|
|
01:48:36.600 --> 01:48:40.160
|
|
And all the transmission work on Kuru and CJD into apes and monkeys.
|
|
|
|
01:48:40.160 --> 01:48:41.720
|
|
They three of them wrote a paper.
|
|
|
|
01:48:41.720 --> 01:48:43.400
|
|
And they reported the first familial cases
|
|
|
|
01:48:43.400 --> 01:48:45.840
|
|
transmitted into non-human primates.
|
|
|
|
01:48:45.840 --> 01:48:46.960
|
|
They offered three explanations.
|
|
|
|
01:48:46.960 --> 01:48:49.520
|
|
First, that the CJD virus, as they thought it was in 1973.
|
|
|
|
01:48:49.520 --> 01:48:50.520
|
|
They thought it was a virus.
|
|
|
|
01:48:50.520 --> 01:48:53.000
|
|
Was transmitted among family members living in close proximity.
|
|
|
|
01:48:53.000 --> 01:48:54.560
|
|
Second, there was a genetic predisposition
|
|
|
|
01:48:54.560 --> 01:48:57.600
|
|
to a ubiquitous CJD virus that was everywhere, like the ether.
|
|
|
|
01:48:57.600 --> 01:48:59.320
|
|
And third, like in AIDS, there was
|
|
|
|
01:48:59.320 --> 01:49:00.840
|
|
vertical transmission of the CJD virus
|
|
|
|
01:49:00.840 --> 01:49:02.160
|
|
from parent to offspring.
|
|
|
|
01:49:02.160 --> 01:49:04.760
|
|
So it turned out that all three explanations were wrong.
|
|
|
|
01:49:04.760 --> 01:49:07.320
|
|
And in 1989, Karen Chow, who had just
|
|
|
|
01:49:07.320 --> 01:49:08.520
|
|
finished her neurology residency here
|
|
|
|
01:49:08.520 --> 01:49:10.560
|
|
and came to work with me as a postdoctoral fellow,
|
|
|
|
01:49:10.560 --> 01:49:13.160
|
|
identified first gene mutation in the PRPG
|
|
|
|
01:49:13.160 --> 01:49:17.080
|
|
in a patient who had died of GSS at UCLA.
|
|
|
|
01:49:17.080 --> 01:49:18.960
|
|
And from that, it became very clear
|
|
|
|
01:49:18.960 --> 01:49:24.320
|
|
that this mutant form of PRPC refolds into PRP scraping.
|
|
|
|
01:49:24.320 --> 01:49:26.400
|
|
It became readily apparent that it
|
|
|
|
01:49:26.400 --> 01:49:29.440
|
|
misfolds into PRP scraping.
|
|
|
|
01:49:29.440 --> 01:49:31.040
|
|
That's a very bold statement.
|
|
|
|
01:49:31.040 --> 01:49:34.960
|
|
And we're going to have to find that paper.
|
|
|
|
01:49:34.960 --> 01:49:36.520
|
|
It's a 1989 paper.
|
|
|
|
01:49:47.120 --> 01:49:52.160
|
|
That this mutant form of PRPC refolds into PRP scraping.
|
|
|
|
01:49:52.160 --> 01:49:54.320
|
|
Now, subsequent to this, this became an industry.
|
|
|
|
01:49:54.320 --> 01:49:56.320
|
|
And there are more than 30 gene mutations
|
|
|
|
01:49:56.320 --> 01:49:58.240
|
|
that have been identified, all of them above the line here,
|
|
|
|
01:49:58.240 --> 01:50:01.360
|
|
that cause these inherited forms of the disease.
|
|
|
|
01:50:01.360 --> 01:50:04.120
|
|
We've also identified what are called polymorphisms.
|
|
|
|
01:50:04.120 --> 01:50:07.080
|
|
And those are shown below the line.
|
|
|
|
01:50:07.080 --> 01:50:10.280
|
|
This one right here, and this one right here in sheep,
|
|
|
|
01:50:10.280 --> 01:50:13.160
|
|
protect people from CJD or from scraping.
|
|
|
|
01:50:13.160 --> 01:50:14.880
|
|
And we've been doing a lot of drug development
|
|
|
|
01:50:14.880 --> 01:50:17.120
|
|
with Fred Cohn and one of his postdoctoral fellows,
|
|
|
|
01:50:17.120 --> 01:50:17.880
|
|
Marty May.
|
|
|
|
01:50:17.880 --> 01:50:22.040
|
|
So he's suggesting that some of these single point mutations
|
|
|
|
01:50:22.040 --> 01:50:25.080
|
|
here can protect people from the misfolding disease, which
|
|
|
|
01:50:25.080 --> 01:50:27.600
|
|
is a pretty remarkable statement that I
|
|
|
|
01:50:27.600 --> 01:50:29.160
|
|
can't necessarily dispute.
|
|
|
|
01:50:29.160 --> 01:50:32.760
|
|
And he's suggesting that these are all associated
|
|
|
|
01:50:32.760 --> 01:50:35.880
|
|
with familial disease.
|
|
|
|
01:50:35.880 --> 01:50:43.880
|
|
I'm still at least skeptical.
|
|
|
|
01:50:43.880 --> 01:50:45.480
|
|
And we've been doing a lot of drug development
|
|
|
|
01:50:45.480 --> 01:50:48.920
|
|
with Fred Cohn and one of his postdoctoral fellows, Marty May.
|
|
|
|
01:50:48.920 --> 01:50:50.680
|
|
Now, let me turn to Prian's and Mad Cows
|
|
|
|
01:50:50.680 --> 01:50:52.000
|
|
and the transmission to people, which
|
|
|
|
01:50:52.000 --> 01:50:53.800
|
|
has really created a public health crisis that threatens
|
|
|
|
01:50:53.800 --> 01:50:56.920
|
|
the food supply as well as the blood supply worldwide.
|
|
|
|
01:50:56.920 --> 01:51:00.800
|
|
Just yesterday, Poland joined the food and blood supplies
|
|
|
|
01:51:00.800 --> 01:51:02.240
|
|
an interesting statement to make.
|
|
|
|
01:51:02.240 --> 01:51:04.880
|
|
It's definitely relevant for public health, then, isn't it?
|
|
|
|
01:51:04.880 --> 01:51:07.800
|
|
Countries of the BSE club, the first case.
|
|
|
|
01:51:07.800 --> 01:51:10.440
|
|
Now, we believe that BSE arose through industrial cannibalism
|
|
|
|
01:51:10.440 --> 01:51:11.840
|
|
in the late 1970s.
|
|
|
|
01:51:11.840 --> 01:51:13.800
|
|
And there's an argument whether it arose spontaneously
|
|
|
|
01:51:13.800 --> 01:51:16.920
|
|
in a cow, perhaps a mutation, or it came from sheep
|
|
|
|
01:51:16.920 --> 01:51:18.600
|
|
where scrapies endemic, but nevertheless,
|
|
|
|
01:51:18.600 --> 01:51:22.120
|
|
it recycled through cows and then into humans.
|
|
|
|
01:51:22.120 --> 01:51:24.680
|
|
Here's a typical newspaper clipping.
|
|
|
|
01:51:24.680 --> 01:51:26.320
|
|
And it's not only a British problem.
|
|
|
|
01:51:26.320 --> 01:51:28.720
|
|
This is also a problem throughout the con.
|
|
|
|
01:51:28.720 --> 01:51:30.040
|
|
And while there are over 100 cases,
|
|
|
|
01:51:30.040 --> 01:51:32.000
|
|
a new variant CJD in young people in Britain,
|
|
|
|
01:51:32.000 --> 01:51:35.360
|
|
there are now four cases in France.
|
|
|
|
01:51:35.360 --> 01:51:37.520
|
|
This is the BSE epidemic that begins in 1986
|
|
|
|
01:51:37.520 --> 01:51:39.800
|
|
with the discovery of the disease by Gerald Wells.
|
|
|
|
01:51:39.800 --> 01:51:40.560
|
|
It takes around 19 years.
|
|
|
|
01:51:40.560 --> 01:51:43.240
|
|
So cannibalism would imply something
|
|
|
|
01:51:43.240 --> 01:51:45.840
|
|
other than protein misfolding, right?
|
|
|
|
01:51:45.840 --> 01:51:49.240
|
|
Because if you feed healthy cattle,
|
|
|
|
01:51:49.240 --> 01:51:51.560
|
|
the remains of healthy cattle, that
|
|
|
|
01:51:51.560 --> 01:51:54.200
|
|
doesn't mean that you're giving them an infectious disease
|
|
|
|
01:51:54.200 --> 01:51:56.080
|
|
unless they already had it.
|
|
|
|
01:51:56.080 --> 01:52:00.160
|
|
So for me, this implies a autoimmune reaction.
|
|
|
|
01:52:00.160 --> 01:52:04.200
|
|
It implies autoimmunity caused by eating stuff
|
|
|
|
01:52:04.200 --> 01:52:05.720
|
|
that's too closely related to you
|
|
|
|
01:52:05.720 --> 01:52:08.240
|
|
and having that go through your payer's patches
|
|
|
|
01:52:08.240 --> 01:52:10.880
|
|
and cause a four alarm fire.
|
|
|
|
01:52:10.880 --> 01:52:13.840
|
|
That seems a lot more understandable
|
|
|
|
01:52:13.840 --> 01:52:17.080
|
|
and more likely than the idea that,
|
|
|
|
01:52:17.080 --> 01:52:18.680
|
|
again, we're dealing with something
|
|
|
|
01:52:18.680 --> 01:52:21.360
|
|
where you get the wrong amino acids in the wrong order
|
|
|
|
01:52:21.360 --> 01:52:24.200
|
|
and it's just one of those is all it's needed
|
|
|
|
01:52:24.200 --> 01:52:26.680
|
|
and you're eventually gonna be dead.
|
|
|
|
01:52:26.680 --> 01:52:29.440
|
|
That's an amazing mythology that I don't think
|
|
|
|
01:52:29.440 --> 01:52:32.880
|
|
any of this past talk has done anything to substantiate.
|
|
|
|
01:52:32.880 --> 01:52:35.640
|
|
92 with almost 40,000 cases
|
|
|
|
01:52:35.640 --> 01:52:37.400
|
|
and then the number of cases keep declining.
|
|
|
|
01:52:37.400 --> 01:52:38.600
|
|
But we keep finding more and more cases
|
|
|
|
01:52:38.600 --> 01:52:40.520
|
|
because more and more sensitive assays are being used
|
|
|
|
01:52:40.520 --> 01:52:42.480
|
|
or measurement techniques to detect the prions.
|
|
|
|
01:52:42.480 --> 01:52:44.600
|
|
All of these animals were clinically ill
|
|
|
|
01:52:44.600 --> 01:52:46.720
|
|
than at least 36 months of age.
|
|
|
|
01:52:46.720 --> 01:52:50.800
|
|
This represents, and these little balls or circles
|
|
|
|
01:52:50.800 --> 01:52:53.120
|
|
are represent one case, whereas each square
|
|
|
|
01:52:53.120 --> 01:52:56.360
|
|
represents a thousand cases on the y-axis.
|
|
|
|
01:52:56.360 --> 01:52:59.920
|
|
So what we're seeing is that there is this continuous
|
|
|
|
01:52:59.920 --> 01:53:01.440
|
|
increase in the number of cases per year,
|
|
|
|
01:53:01.440 --> 01:53:03.600
|
|
this is the yearly numbers of new variants, CJD,
|
|
|
|
01:53:03.600 --> 01:53:05.600
|
|
except in 2001, the numbers down here.
|
|
|
|
01:53:05.600 --> 01:53:08.200
|
|
What it'll be in 2002, we don't know.
|
|
|
|
01:53:08.200 --> 01:53:10.000
|
|
So we see that this disease appears about a decade
|
|
|
|
01:53:10.000 --> 01:53:11.160
|
|
after the beginning of BSE,
|
|
|
|
01:53:11.160 --> 01:53:13.240
|
|
so we think the incubation time exceeds one decade
|
|
|
|
01:53:13.240 --> 01:53:15.720
|
|
and in from crew studies, we know it can be up to four decades.
|
|
|
|
01:53:15.720 --> 01:53:18.080
|
|
Wow, so we could be waiting right now
|
|
|
|
01:53:18.080 --> 01:53:20.240
|
|
for it to happen to all of us is what is impre-
|
|
|
|
01:53:20.240 --> 01:53:21.800
|
|
what is implication is.
|
|
|
|
01:53:21.880 --> 01:53:23.920
|
|
That's pretty cool because if it happens
|
|
|
|
01:53:23.920 --> 01:53:26.720
|
|
from a transfection that's 20 years in the future,
|
|
|
|
01:53:26.720 --> 01:53:29.320
|
|
he will have already predicted it's gonna occur.
|
|
|
|
01:53:33.080 --> 01:53:36.360
|
|
Boy, that's creating a pretty wide envelope
|
|
|
|
01:53:36.360 --> 01:53:39.760
|
|
for naturally occurring prion disease
|
|
|
|
01:53:39.760 --> 01:53:43.820
|
|
to just show up and mass across the population, isn't it?
|
|
|
|
01:53:44.760 --> 01:53:47.960
|
|
Oh man, we shouldn't have been eating those cows 20 years ago.
|
|
|
|
01:53:47.960 --> 01:53:51.160
|
|
Right, we shouldn't have been eating all that beef 20 years ago.
|
|
|
|
01:53:52.800 --> 01:53:54.760
|
|
Wow, I can't believe it.
|
|
|
|
01:53:54.760 --> 01:53:56.640
|
|
We better stop eating beef all together.
|
|
|
|
01:53:56.640 --> 01:53:58.560
|
|
Maybe we should just eat fake beef
|
|
|
|
01:53:59.520 --> 01:54:02.280
|
|
because I mean, prions take 40 years to incubate.
|
|
|
|
01:54:02.280 --> 01:54:05.440
|
|
Obviously, the reason why everybody's dying of prions now
|
|
|
|
01:54:05.440 --> 01:54:07.640
|
|
is because we've been eating meat for 40 years.
|
|
|
|
01:54:07.640 --> 01:54:09.200
|
|
Just listen to this talk.
|
|
|
|
01:54:13.360 --> 01:54:16.000
|
|
This is an MRI scan and it shows,
|
|
|
|
01:54:16.000 --> 01:54:17.120
|
|
if we didn't have that light on over there,
|
|
|
|
01:54:17.120 --> 01:54:18.280
|
|
you could see this much better,
|
|
|
|
01:54:18.280 --> 01:54:19.880
|
|
this hyper-density is what it's called ate
|
|
|
|
01:54:19.880 --> 01:54:21.240
|
|
and all the way down into the pulvinar,
|
|
|
|
01:54:22.080 --> 01:54:24.280
|
|
which is this dorsal nucleus of the thalamus
|
|
|
|
01:54:24.280 --> 01:54:26.680
|
|
and this is called a hockey stick sign.
|
|
|
|
01:54:26.680 --> 01:54:29.160
|
|
And that's very typical of patients with new variant CJD.
|
|
|
|
01:54:29.160 --> 01:54:32.120
|
|
Patients with sporadic CJD have all these hyper-intensities
|
|
|
|
01:54:32.120 --> 01:54:32.960
|
|
that are seen bilaterally,
|
|
|
|
01:54:32.960 --> 01:54:35.360
|
|
but they don't have the lighting up of the pulvinar.
|
|
|
|
01:54:37.680 --> 01:54:39.400
|
|
I said I would show you some of these analog plaques
|
|
|
|
01:54:39.400 --> 01:54:40.880
|
|
and in patients with new variant CJD
|
|
|
|
01:54:40.880 --> 01:54:42.720
|
|
and this is the work of Steve D'Armond again
|
|
|
|
01:54:42.720 --> 01:54:43.960
|
|
with slides sent to, I should say,
|
|
|
|
01:54:43.960 --> 01:54:45.840
|
|
sessions sent to us by Bob Will and Jim Ironside
|
|
|
|
01:54:45.840 --> 01:54:46.680
|
|
and Edinburgh.
|
|
|
|
01:54:46.680 --> 01:54:48.040
|
|
So these are the plaques around by this halo
|
|
|
|
01:54:48.040 --> 01:54:49.360
|
|
of sponge-formed generation.
|
|
|
|
01:54:49.360 --> 01:54:52.680
|
|
They stain with antibodies to the prion protein very intensely.
|
|
|
|
01:54:55.800 --> 01:54:59.480
|
|
So which antibody, how do you raise an antibody
|
|
|
|
01:54:59.480 --> 01:55:01.640
|
|
to the prion protein if it's in that form?
|
|
|
|
01:55:01.640 --> 01:55:04.480
|
|
You reuse the one that binds to the parts
|
|
|
|
01:55:04.480 --> 01:55:05.280
|
|
that are still there.
|
|
|
|
01:55:05.280 --> 01:55:08.160
|
|
You don't have to be specific about that at all right now.
|
|
|
|
01:55:08.160 --> 01:55:10.320
|
|
Given the fact that just 20 minutes ago
|
|
|
|
01:55:10.320 --> 01:55:12.400
|
|
you were using antibodies as an indicator
|
|
|
|
01:55:12.400 --> 01:55:15.240
|
|
of whether it was prion protein in a natural form
|
|
|
|
01:55:15.240 --> 01:55:16.760
|
|
or in the infectious form,
|
|
|
|
01:55:16.760 --> 01:55:19.200
|
|
don't you think you could have used that same technique
|
|
|
|
01:55:19.200 --> 01:55:22.560
|
|
to show what fraction of that protein was in
|
|
|
|
01:55:22.560 --> 01:55:24.720
|
|
in a badly folded form
|
|
|
|
01:55:24.720 --> 01:55:27.720
|
|
or in a dangerous folded form?
|
|
|
|
01:55:27.720 --> 01:55:29.840
|
|
Or do you just think that he wasn't clever enough
|
|
|
|
01:55:29.840 --> 01:55:32.840
|
|
to ask that question with the tools that he already had?
|
|
|
|
01:55:32.840 --> 01:55:35.840
|
|
BUZZER.
|
|
|
|
01:55:35.840 --> 01:55:38.520
|
|
This is why they hate me to be in the audience of these talks,
|
|
|
|
01:55:38.520 --> 01:55:41.160
|
|
why they hated me in the audience of these talks.
|
|
|
|
01:55:41.160 --> 01:55:42.360
|
|
Oh, very intensely.
|
|
|
|
01:55:45.840 --> 01:55:47.400
|
|
I've already said this seven times.
|
|
|
|
01:55:49.960 --> 01:55:52.200
|
|
Now, one wanted to try to figure out
|
|
|
|
01:55:52.200 --> 01:55:53.360
|
|
where did all of this start?
|
|
|
|
01:55:53.360 --> 01:55:54.560
|
|
Did it really start in sheep?
|
|
|
|
01:55:54.560 --> 01:55:55.760
|
|
Did it start in cows?
|
|
|
|
01:55:55.760 --> 01:55:57.240
|
|
And did it come from the cows to the humans?
|
|
|
|
01:55:57.240 --> 01:55:58.440
|
|
And if we were looking for a virus,
|
|
|
|
01:55:58.440 --> 01:55:59.920
|
|
we could do this very easily.
|
|
|
|
01:55:59.920 --> 01:56:01.080
|
|
The virus would be simple to track
|
|
|
|
01:56:01.080 --> 01:56:02.320
|
|
because the virus would have a nucleic acid,
|
|
|
|
01:56:02.320 --> 01:56:03.720
|
|
a piece of DNA or RNA,
|
|
|
|
01:56:03.720 --> 01:56:07.000
|
|
and we could easily track it into the sheep and see.
|
|
|
|
01:56:07.000 --> 01:56:11.000
|
|
Viruses are easy to track according to Stanley Prusen
|
|
|
|
01:56:11.000 --> 01:56:14.200
|
|
or easy, I mean, come on, that's easy work.
|
|
|
|
01:56:14.200 --> 01:56:16.040
|
|
Easy work.
|
|
|
|
01:56:17.040 --> 01:56:20.440
|
|
BUZZER.
|
|
|
|
01:56:20.440 --> 01:56:22.200
|
|
And it had nothing to do with the sheep,
|
|
|
|
01:56:22.200 --> 01:56:24.400
|
|
but that same piece of DNA or RNA
|
|
|
|
01:56:24.400 --> 01:56:26.600
|
|
appeared in the cow and then appeared in the human.
|
|
|
|
01:56:26.600 --> 01:56:27.480
|
|
We can't do that.
|
|
|
|
01:56:27.480 --> 01:56:28.920
|
|
So what we had to do was really begin
|
|
|
|
01:56:28.920 --> 01:56:30.640
|
|
to look at what are called prion strains.
|
|
|
|
01:56:30.640 --> 01:56:32.120
|
|
And what's happening is that PRP scrape
|
|
|
|
01:56:32.120 --> 01:56:33.280
|
|
is signified by a square.
|
|
|
|
01:56:33.280 --> 01:56:35.600
|
|
It's stimulating the conversion of bovine PRPC.
|
|
|
|
01:56:35.600 --> 01:56:38.920
|
|
This is from the sheep into PRP scrapey of the cow.
|
|
|
|
01:56:38.920 --> 01:56:41.200
|
|
And the same thing, we can reiterate this into the human.
|
|
|
|
01:56:41.200 --> 01:56:42.400
|
|
Now, there's a lot of data, but I'm
|
|
|
|
01:56:42.400 --> 01:56:43.840
|
|
only going to show you very little.
|
|
|
|
01:56:43.840 --> 01:56:45.360
|
|
And what we did was to use transgenic mice
|
|
|
|
01:56:45.440 --> 01:56:47.240
|
|
to investigate the origin of BSE
|
|
|
|
01:56:47.240 --> 01:56:48.720
|
|
and the transmission of prions to humans.
|
|
|
|
01:56:48.720 --> 01:56:50.680
|
|
Oh, so we're going to use an animal model
|
|
|
|
01:56:50.680 --> 01:56:54.280
|
|
to understand the cartoon that he says definitely happens,
|
|
|
|
01:56:54.280 --> 01:56:58.840
|
|
that the sheep protein causes the refolding of the cow protein
|
|
|
|
01:56:58.840 --> 01:57:01.800
|
|
that causes the refolding of the human protein.
|
|
|
|
01:57:01.800 --> 01:57:03.920
|
|
There's three assumptions there on top
|
|
|
|
01:57:03.920 --> 01:57:05.920
|
|
of three different cartoons.
|
|
|
|
01:57:05.920 --> 01:57:07.320
|
|
And yet somehow or another, we're
|
|
|
|
01:57:07.320 --> 01:57:09.800
|
|
going to move right on to a transgenic animal model.
|
|
|
|
01:57:09.800 --> 01:57:10.440
|
|
Let's hear it.
|
|
|
|
01:57:10.440 --> 01:57:11.440
|
|
Let's hear it.
|
|
|
|
01:57:11.440 --> 01:57:12.400
|
|
Now, there's a lot of data, but I'm
|
|
|
|
01:57:12.400 --> 01:57:13.920
|
|
only going to show you very little.
|
|
|
|
01:57:13.920 --> 01:57:15.400
|
|
And what we did was to use transgenic mice
|
|
|
|
01:57:15.400 --> 01:57:17.760
|
|
to investigate the origin of BSE and the transmission
|
|
|
|
01:57:17.760 --> 01:57:18.960
|
|
of prions to humans.
|
|
|
|
01:57:18.960 --> 01:57:20.480
|
|
There's now compelling evidence that indicates
|
|
|
|
01:57:20.480 --> 01:57:22.720
|
|
that prions and beef products were ingested by humans, who
|
|
|
|
01:57:22.720 --> 01:57:26.480
|
|
later developed variant CJD.
|
|
|
|
01:57:26.480 --> 01:57:29.000
|
|
What we began with, and this is Jim Mastrioni's work,
|
|
|
|
01:57:29.000 --> 01:57:31.920
|
|
Glenn Telling's work, was what we call a humanized mouse.
|
|
|
|
01:57:31.920 --> 01:57:34.800
|
|
So now this mouse behaves toward prions like a human being.
|
|
|
|
01:57:34.800 --> 01:57:37.320
|
|
And when we take sporadic CJD or familial CJD
|
|
|
|
01:57:37.320 --> 01:57:38.880
|
|
and transmit into the mice brain extracts
|
|
|
|
01:57:38.880 --> 01:57:40.520
|
|
from people who have died of these diseases,
|
|
|
|
01:57:40.520 --> 01:57:42.520
|
|
all of the mice get sick in about 200 days.
|
|
|
|
01:57:42.520 --> 01:57:45.000
|
|
But when we took new variant CJD from young people in England,
|
|
|
|
01:57:45.000 --> 01:57:46.880
|
|
people in their early 20s or late teens,
|
|
|
|
01:57:46.880 --> 01:57:49.920
|
|
we found that about 25%, this is wrong, it's not 60%,
|
|
|
|
01:57:49.920 --> 01:57:53.080
|
|
but about 25% of the mice became ill by 500 days.
|
|
|
|
01:57:53.080 --> 01:57:56.320
|
|
And when we took brain extracts from cows with BSE,
|
|
|
|
01:57:56.320 --> 01:57:59.120
|
|
none of the mice developed disease by 600 days.
|
|
|
|
01:57:59.120 --> 01:58:00.240
|
|
Now, Mike Scott did an experiment
|
|
|
|
01:58:00.240 --> 01:58:01.760
|
|
where he created bovinized mice.
|
|
|
|
01:58:01.760 --> 01:58:03.440
|
|
So these are mice that behave like cows
|
|
|
|
01:58:03.440 --> 01:58:04.760
|
|
with respected prions.
|
|
|
|
01:58:04.760 --> 01:58:07.800
|
|
And when he took mad cows, brain, 240 days,
|
|
|
|
01:58:07.800 --> 01:58:08.840
|
|
and all the mice were sick.
|
|
|
|
01:58:08.840 --> 01:58:10.560
|
|
With new variant CJD, what he found
|
|
|
|
01:58:10.560 --> 01:58:13.080
|
|
was that 100% of the mice developed disease
|
|
|
|
01:58:13.080 --> 01:58:15.240
|
|
at 260 days after inoculation.
|
|
|
|
01:58:15.240 --> 01:58:16.360
|
|
So this was quite a shock.
|
|
|
|
01:58:16.360 --> 01:58:18.440
|
|
And that when we took sheep's scrapie from the United States,
|
|
|
|
01:58:18.440 --> 01:58:23.200
|
|
the mice were even more susceptible, 210 days, 100% were sick.
|
|
|
|
01:58:23.200 --> 01:58:27.400
|
|
Now, we would have to look at what this mouse model is.
|
|
|
|
01:58:27.400 --> 01:58:32.120
|
|
I don't know if they have overexpression of the bovine protein
|
|
|
|
01:58:32.120 --> 01:58:34.440
|
|
in their brain or the human protein in their brain.
|
|
|
|
01:58:34.440 --> 01:58:35.920
|
|
That's my guess.
|
|
|
|
01:58:35.920 --> 01:58:40.160
|
|
My guess is that this time, I'm sure
|
|
|
|
01:58:40.160 --> 01:58:41.000
|
|
I'm right.
|
|
|
|
01:58:41.000 --> 01:58:43.800
|
|
Okay, I would bet my, I bet everything on it.
|
|
|
|
01:58:43.800 --> 01:58:46.160
|
|
In 2002, and when this was done,
|
|
|
|
01:58:46.160 --> 01:58:48.160
|
|
it would have been before 2002,
|
|
|
|
01:58:48.160 --> 01:58:50.440
|
|
there would have been no way for them to knock out
|
|
|
|
01:58:50.440 --> 01:58:53.520
|
|
the native gene and replace it with the bovine gene.
|
|
|
|
01:58:53.520 --> 01:58:56.040
|
|
So what they're most likely working with here
|
|
|
|
01:58:56.040 --> 01:58:58.840
|
|
is a mouse that also expresses the bovine
|
|
|
|
01:59:00.440 --> 01:59:05.320
|
|
prion protein driven by some genetic technology.
|
|
|
|
01:59:05.320 --> 01:59:06.880
|
|
And then when they inject that animal
|
|
|
|
01:59:06.880 --> 01:59:08.320
|
|
in the brain, it gets sick.
|
|
|
|
01:59:11.160 --> 01:59:15.960
|
|
And so we would have to, again, look into these papers
|
|
|
|
01:59:15.960 --> 01:59:16.800
|
|
and figure it out.
|
|
|
|
01:59:16.800 --> 01:59:21.000
|
|
But my guess is that this isn't gonna be as clean a result
|
|
|
|
01:59:21.000 --> 01:59:24.160
|
|
as what he's suggesting it is here,
|
|
|
|
01:59:24.160 --> 01:59:27.800
|
|
simply because the experimental model is not as clean
|
|
|
|
01:59:27.800 --> 01:59:29.320
|
|
as he wants you to believe it is.
|
|
|
|
01:59:29.320 --> 01:59:34.320
|
|
It's a bovine, it responds like a cow with respect to prion,
|
|
|
|
01:59:37.000 --> 01:59:39.120
|
|
it responds like a human with respect to prion.
|
|
|
|
01:59:39.120 --> 01:59:41.640
|
|
You can hear him say it again if you want to.
|
|
|
|
01:59:41.640 --> 01:59:43.040
|
|
Into the mice, brain extracts from people
|
|
|
|
01:59:43.040 --> 01:59:44.320
|
|
who've died of these diseases.
|
|
|
|
01:59:44.320 --> 01:59:46.320
|
|
All of the mice get sick in about 200 days.
|
|
|
|
01:59:46.320 --> 01:59:48.800
|
|
But when we took new variants, CJD from young people in England,
|
|
|
|
01:59:48.800 --> 01:59:50.720
|
|
people in the early 20s, late teens,
|
|
|
|
01:59:50.720 --> 01:59:53.760
|
|
we found that about 25%, this is wrong, it's not 60%,
|
|
|
|
01:59:53.760 --> 01:59:56.880
|
|
but about 25% of the mice became ill by 500 days.
|
|
|
|
01:59:56.880 --> 02:00:00.120
|
|
And when we took brain extracts from cows with BSE,
|
|
|
|
02:00:00.120 --> 02:00:02.960
|
|
none of the mice developed disease by 600 days.
|
|
|
|
02:00:02.960 --> 02:00:04.120
|
|
Now Mike Scott did an experiment
|
|
|
|
02:00:04.120 --> 02:00:05.600
|
|
where he created bovineized mice.
|
|
|
|
02:00:05.600 --> 02:00:07.280
|
|
So these are mice that behave like cows
|
|
|
|
02:00:07.280 --> 02:00:08.120
|
|
with respect to prions.
|
|
|
|
02:00:08.120 --> 02:00:10.080
|
|
See bovineized mice and then again,
|
|
|
|
02:00:10.080 --> 02:00:11.640
|
|
they're injecting into the brain.
|
|
|
|
02:00:11.640 --> 02:00:16.640
|
|
Again, how does that equivalent to eating your dead relative?
|
|
|
|
02:00:17.080 --> 02:00:20.920
|
|
How does that equivalent to eating another cow?
|
|
|
|
02:00:20.920 --> 02:00:24.480
|
|
It's just all not the experimental model that you want it to be
|
|
|
|
02:00:24.480 --> 02:00:26.400
|
|
if you want to understand what he was showing
|
|
|
|
02:00:26.400 --> 02:00:28.040
|
|
in the previous slides.
|
|
|
|
02:00:28.040 --> 02:00:31.080
|
|
And when he took mad cows, brain, 240 days
|
|
|
|
02:00:31.080 --> 02:00:32.120
|
|
and all the mice were sick.
|
|
|
|
02:00:32.120 --> 02:00:35.040
|
|
With new variants, CJD, what he found was that 100%
|
|
|
|
02:00:35.040 --> 02:00:37.360
|
|
of the mice developed disease at 260 days
|
|
|
|
02:00:37.360 --> 02:00:38.480
|
|
after inoculation.
|
|
|
|
02:00:38.480 --> 02:00:39.600
|
|
So this was quite a shock.
|
|
|
|
02:00:39.600 --> 02:00:41.680
|
|
And that when we took sheep's scrapie from the United States,
|
|
|
|
02:00:41.680 --> 02:00:45.080
|
|
the mice were even more susceptible, 210 days, 100% were sick.
|
|
|
|
02:00:46.480 --> 02:00:47.600
|
|
And we looked at the neuropathology
|
|
|
|
02:00:47.600 --> 02:00:49.040
|
|
against Stevie Arman's work.
|
|
|
|
02:00:49.040 --> 02:00:51.480
|
|
What Steve found was that if we began with sheep's scrapie,
|
|
|
|
02:00:51.480 --> 02:00:53.360
|
|
there was very little of the prion protein deposited
|
|
|
|
02:00:53.360 --> 02:00:54.480
|
|
in what's called the corpus callosum,
|
|
|
|
02:00:54.480 --> 02:00:56.520
|
|
the structure that connects both sides of your brain.
|
|
|
|
02:00:56.520 --> 02:00:58.400
|
|
And some people with intractable epilepsy,
|
|
|
|
02:00:58.400 --> 02:00:59.480
|
|
this structure is cut.
|
|
|
|
02:01:01.520 --> 02:01:04.080
|
|
When we looked, if we began with BSE in these bovineized mice,
|
|
|
|
02:01:04.080 --> 02:01:05.680
|
|
we saw large amounts of the prion protein
|
|
|
|
02:01:05.680 --> 02:01:07.160
|
|
deposited in these big plaques.
|
|
|
|
02:01:07.160 --> 02:01:08.640
|
|
And if we took new variant CJD,
|
|
|
|
02:01:08.640 --> 02:01:10.040
|
|
the image was indistinguishable.
|
|
|
|
02:01:11.040 --> 02:01:12.360
|
|
So when we put all this together,
|
|
|
|
02:01:12.360 --> 02:01:14.040
|
|
the indistinguishable neuropathology,
|
|
|
|
02:01:14.040 --> 02:01:15.440
|
|
the very similar incubation times,
|
|
|
|
02:01:15.440 --> 02:01:17.200
|
|
it became very clear that there was little doubt
|
|
|
|
02:01:17.200 --> 02:01:19.400
|
|
that the people had become sick from the cows.
|
|
|
|
02:01:19.400 --> 02:01:20.960
|
|
And that's in addition to all the human epidemiology
|
|
|
|
02:01:20.960 --> 02:01:23.080
|
|
showing the disease has confined largely to Great Britain
|
|
|
|
02:01:23.080 --> 02:01:24.680
|
|
with four cases in France, as I said,
|
|
|
|
02:01:24.680 --> 02:01:26.280
|
|
one in Italy and one in Ireland.
|
|
|
|
02:01:27.680 --> 02:01:29.480
|
|
And now there's actually one in the United States,
|
|
|
|
02:01:29.480 --> 02:01:31.640
|
|
but this is a woman who, 22 years old,
|
|
|
|
02:01:31.640 --> 02:01:33.640
|
|
22 years old, living in Florida,
|
|
|
|
02:01:33.640 --> 02:01:36.200
|
|
who lived in Great Britain for nearly 10 years.
|
|
|
|
02:01:36.200 --> 02:01:37.560
|
|
And it's a British citizen.
|
|
|
|
02:01:39.080 --> 02:01:40.560
|
|
So all of this put together,
|
|
|
|
02:01:40.560 --> 02:01:41.840
|
|
Mike Scott began to think about this
|
|
|
|
02:01:41.840 --> 02:01:42.760
|
|
in a slightly different way.
|
|
|
|
02:01:42.760 --> 02:01:44.640
|
|
And he's begun to wonder if, in fact,
|
|
|
|
02:01:44.640 --> 02:01:46.840
|
|
all sheep with screpy prions, the blue ones,
|
|
|
|
02:01:46.840 --> 02:01:50.080
|
|
also have a few BSE prions that multiply more slowly.
|
|
|
|
02:01:50.080 --> 02:01:51.720
|
|
And that what happened in the late 1970s
|
|
|
|
02:01:51.720 --> 02:01:53.080
|
|
was that when they reduced the temperature
|
|
|
|
02:01:53.080 --> 02:01:55.560
|
|
and also the process, they did less severe,
|
|
|
|
02:01:55.560 --> 02:01:57.280
|
|
what they call the rendering process,
|
|
|
|
02:01:57.280 --> 02:02:00.040
|
|
the screpy prions were still destroyed,
|
|
|
|
02:02:00.040 --> 02:02:01.720
|
|
but the BSE prions survived.
|
|
|
|
02:02:01.720 --> 02:02:03.760
|
|
And now they multiplied in cattle
|
|
|
|
02:02:03.760 --> 02:02:05.360
|
|
where they became pathogenic for humans.
|
|
|
|
02:02:05.360 --> 02:02:06.640
|
|
And there were no more screpy prions,
|
|
|
|
02:02:06.640 --> 02:02:08.000
|
|
the blue ones, the whole down the amount
|
|
|
|
02:02:08.000 --> 02:02:09.240
|
|
of the red ones that could be made,
|
|
|
|
02:02:09.240 --> 02:02:11.240
|
|
because whether that's true or not, I don't know.
|
|
|
|
02:02:11.240 --> 02:02:12.240
|
|
So this is a hypothesis.
|
|
|
|
02:02:12.240 --> 02:02:14.160
|
|
But there's no way for that to happen
|
|
|
|
02:02:14.160 --> 02:02:17.280
|
|
unless you're talking about prions moving separately
|
|
|
|
02:02:17.280 --> 02:02:22.040
|
|
as animals breed over time and building up separately
|
|
|
|
02:02:22.040 --> 02:02:24.600
|
|
in the population, even though they're not passed on
|
|
|
|
02:02:24.600 --> 02:02:25.680
|
|
through birth.
|
|
|
|
02:02:25.680 --> 02:02:27.600
|
|
That's incredible.
|
|
|
|
02:02:27.600 --> 02:02:29.760
|
|
Or maybe they are passed, I mean, wow.
|
|
|
|
02:02:30.760 --> 02:02:32.360
|
|
That's a pretty funny model.
|
|
|
|
02:02:32.360 --> 02:02:34.120
|
|
It makes a lot of predictions that I bet
|
|
|
|
02:02:34.120 --> 02:02:35.680
|
|
they won't bother testing.
|
|
|
|
02:02:35.680 --> 02:02:37.680
|
|
We're trying to pursue this.
|
|
|
|
02:02:37.680 --> 02:02:39.360
|
|
So variant CJD is caused by prions
|
|
|
|
02:02:39.360 --> 02:02:41.080
|
|
in beef products from mad cows.
|
|
|
|
02:02:41.080 --> 02:02:43.040
|
|
Over 85% of all human prion diseases
|
|
|
|
02:02:43.040 --> 02:02:45.000
|
|
are sporadic 10 to 15% are inherited.
|
|
|
|
02:02:45.000 --> 02:02:47.200
|
|
So I just want to point out that while there are about 5000
|
|
|
|
02:02:47.200 --> 02:02:49.000
|
|
cases of CJD across the planet each year,
|
|
|
|
02:02:49.000 --> 02:02:51.760
|
|
we're talking about 25 cases of variant CJD so far.
|
|
|
|
02:02:51.760 --> 02:02:54.800
|
|
So just to give you a little perspective on the numbers.
|
|
|
|
02:02:54.800 --> 02:02:58.880
|
|
Let's now turn to therapeutic approaches to prion diseases.
|
|
|
|
02:02:58.880 --> 02:03:00.240
|
|
So there are a large number of approaches
|
|
|
|
02:03:00.240 --> 02:03:01.600
|
|
that we've taken here at UCSF.
|
|
|
|
02:03:01.600 --> 02:03:03.440
|
|
And I won't talk about rational drug design based
|
|
|
|
02:03:03.440 --> 02:03:05.080
|
|
upon what is called dominant negative inhibition
|
|
|
|
02:03:05.080 --> 02:03:05.880
|
|
or gene therapy.
|
|
|
|
02:03:05.880 --> 02:03:07.360
|
|
And I'm also not going to talk about what
|
|
|
|
02:03:07.360 --> 02:03:08.280
|
|
is called enhanced clearance.
|
|
|
|
02:03:08.280 --> 02:03:10.640
|
|
But I come back to talk a little bit about clearance of prions.
|
|
|
|
02:03:10.640 --> 02:03:11.760
|
|
I am going to talk about antibodies
|
|
|
|
02:03:11.760 --> 02:03:13.920
|
|
that were used to inhibit prion replication.
|
|
|
|
02:03:13.920 --> 02:03:16.160
|
|
And then I'm going to talk about a drug called quinacrine
|
|
|
|
02:03:16.160 --> 02:03:18.080
|
|
that we're giving to patients in a study with Bruce Miller
|
|
|
|
02:03:18.080 --> 02:03:22.240
|
|
and Michael Geshwin and many, many other people here at UCSF.
|
|
|
|
02:03:22.240 --> 02:03:24.320
|
|
So this is David Parris' work using these antibodies produced
|
|
|
|
02:03:24.320 --> 02:03:27.040
|
|
by Dennis Burton and Anthony Williamson at Scripps.
|
|
|
|
02:03:27.040 --> 02:03:29.200
|
|
And again, the same blue antibodies react out here,
|
|
|
|
02:03:29.200 --> 02:03:30.520
|
|
more toward the N-terminus, the green ones
|
|
|
|
02:03:30.520 --> 02:03:33.000
|
|
at the C-terminus, and the red ones in the middle region.
|
|
|
|
02:03:33.000 --> 02:03:36.880
|
|
That's Helix A, Helix B, Helix C.
|
|
|
|
02:03:36.880 --> 02:03:38.600
|
|
All this looks a little complicated.
|
|
|
|
02:03:38.600 --> 02:03:40.360
|
|
But let's just look over here at this graph.
|
|
|
|
02:03:40.360 --> 02:03:42.040
|
|
So we're adding increasing amounts of antibody
|
|
|
|
02:03:42.040 --> 02:03:43.040
|
|
to cultured cells.
|
|
|
|
02:03:43.040 --> 02:03:44.800
|
|
And we're seeing the decrease in the amount of PRP
|
|
|
|
02:03:44.800 --> 02:03:46.280
|
|
scrapey, the protein of the prion.
|
|
|
|
02:03:46.280 --> 02:03:48.240
|
|
And the red antibodies work better than the blue antibodies
|
|
|
|
02:03:48.240 --> 02:03:49.080
|
|
but only a little bit.
|
|
|
|
02:03:49.080 --> 02:03:52.440
|
|
But both red and blue work much better than the green antibodies.
|
|
|
|
02:03:52.440 --> 02:03:54.040
|
|
And if we look here, now instead of having
|
|
|
|
02:03:54.040 --> 02:03:56.280
|
|
the concentration of antibody, it's the duration of antibodies.
|
|
|
|
02:03:56.280 --> 02:03:59.080
|
|
Are you at all surprised that one
|
|
|
|
02:03:59.080 --> 02:04:00.840
|
|
of the therapies he wanted to talk about
|
|
|
|
02:04:00.840 --> 02:04:04.200
|
|
was using monoclonal antibodies to fight prion disease?
|
|
|
|
02:04:04.200 --> 02:04:05.880
|
|
Are you at all surprised?
|
|
|
|
02:04:05.880 --> 02:04:08.240
|
|
This is at a time when monoclonal antibodies
|
|
|
|
02:04:08.240 --> 02:04:15.680
|
|
are right at the hottest biologic there is to make.
|
|
|
|
02:04:15.680 --> 02:04:19.680
|
|
And the IP law is ripe for the writing.
|
|
|
|
02:04:19.680 --> 02:04:20.800
|
|
Antibody treatment.
|
|
|
|
02:04:20.800 --> 02:04:22.960
|
|
So we picked one concentration of antibody.
|
|
|
|
02:04:22.960 --> 02:04:25.600
|
|
And now what we've done, and you see that the red ones
|
|
|
|
02:04:25.600 --> 02:04:27.720
|
|
work quite rapidly compared to the blue ones.
|
|
|
|
02:04:27.720 --> 02:04:29.800
|
|
And what this allows us to do is to look at when
|
|
|
|
02:04:29.800 --> 02:04:32.400
|
|
we see a half maximal decrease, when we've gone down 50%.
|
|
|
|
02:04:32.400 --> 02:04:36.000
|
|
And that's about at this point at about 30 hours right in here.
|
|
|
|
02:04:36.000 --> 02:04:38.840
|
|
It was actually IMM, UNITY.
|
|
|
|
02:04:38.840 --> 02:04:41.880
|
|
That's what I got, bodies anti.
|
|
|
|
02:04:41.880 --> 02:04:45.840
|
|
He spelled immunity not by antibodies.
|
|
|
|
02:04:45.840 --> 02:04:48.720
|
|
And in 1990, Bruce Cheesebrow and Byron Coe
|
|
|
|
02:04:48.720 --> 02:04:50.240
|
|
working at the Rocky Mountain Laboratory
|
|
|
|
02:04:50.240 --> 02:04:52.280
|
|
did a lot of work on the synthesis of PRPC
|
|
|
|
02:04:52.280 --> 02:04:54.040
|
|
and defined what is called the Half-Life for formation.
|
|
|
|
02:04:54.040 --> 02:04:55.480
|
|
Very rapid.
|
|
|
|
02:04:55.480 --> 02:04:58.360
|
|
And David Borchelt working here in San Francisco confirmed
|
|
|
|
02:04:58.360 --> 02:05:00.560
|
|
that and then showed that the Half-Life time for degradation
|
|
|
|
02:05:00.560 --> 02:05:01.600
|
|
is about six hours.
|
|
|
|
02:05:01.600 --> 02:05:03.880
|
|
And that PRPC was made even more slowly
|
|
|
|
02:05:03.880 --> 02:05:05.560
|
|
with a half-time of formation of about three to 10.
|
|
|
|
02:05:05.560 --> 02:05:08.400
|
|
OK, so here they're transfecting these two.
|
|
|
|
02:05:08.400 --> 02:05:12.880
|
|
And now PRPC grapey actually must have a different sequence
|
|
|
|
02:05:12.880 --> 02:05:16.360
|
|
because otherwise you're expressing the same protein.
|
|
|
|
02:05:16.360 --> 02:05:17.960
|
|
It gets folded in two different ways.
|
|
|
|
02:05:17.960 --> 02:05:19.600
|
|
So either you're trans, how can you
|
|
|
|
02:05:19.600 --> 02:05:23.120
|
|
transfect neuroblastoma cells with this protein
|
|
|
|
02:05:23.120 --> 02:05:24.640
|
|
unless it has a different sequence?
|
|
|
|
02:05:25.480 --> 02:05:27.200
|
|
What's going on here?
|
|
|
|
02:05:27.200 --> 02:05:30.400
|
|
What is going on here?
|
|
|
|
02:05:30.400 --> 02:05:33.720
|
|
David Borchelt working here in San Francisco confirmed that
|
|
|
|
02:05:33.720 --> 02:05:35.480
|
|
and then showed that the Half-Life time for degradation
|
|
|
|
02:05:35.480 --> 02:05:36.600
|
|
is about six hours.
|
|
|
|
02:05:36.600 --> 02:05:38.800
|
|
And that PRPC grapey was made even more slowly
|
|
|
|
02:05:38.800 --> 02:05:41.080
|
|
with a half-time of formation of about three to 10 hours.
|
|
|
|
02:05:41.080 --> 02:05:45.000
|
|
Now, I had thought that PRPC grapey was complete granite
|
|
|
|
02:05:45.000 --> 02:05:46.560
|
|
and that it was never degraded.
|
|
|
|
02:05:46.560 --> 02:05:47.960
|
|
But in the last slide that I showed you,
|
|
|
|
02:05:47.960 --> 02:05:48.960
|
|
I don't get that at all.
|
|
|
|
02:05:48.960 --> 02:05:50.880
|
|
This is really represents the degradation of PRPC
|
|
|
|
02:05:50.880 --> 02:05:53.800
|
|
the loss of prions from the culture.
|
|
|
|
02:05:53.880 --> 02:05:56.000
|
|
They couldn't separate the two
|
|
|
|
02:05:56.000 --> 02:05:57.920
|
|
because they're the same weight.
|
|
|
|
02:05:59.080 --> 02:06:00.400
|
|
They can't separate the two
|
|
|
|
02:06:00.400 --> 02:06:03.320
|
|
because they exist together in their cartoons.
|
|
|
|
02:06:06.120 --> 02:06:08.440
|
|
But then they shouldn't be able to exist together
|
|
|
|
02:06:08.440 --> 02:06:11.000
|
|
because the one causes the other to become it.
|
|
|
|
02:06:13.640 --> 02:06:16.080
|
|
And yet they have the same amino acid sequence.
|
|
|
|
02:06:16.080 --> 02:06:20.800
|
|
So how would you express one or the other in a cell culture?
|
|
|
|
02:06:20.800 --> 02:06:22.440
|
|
You'd have to use the same RNA.
|
|
|
|
02:06:22.440 --> 02:06:23.440
|
|
I don't get it.
|
|
|
|
02:06:23.440 --> 02:06:24.320
|
|
I don't get it.
|
|
|
|
02:06:24.320 --> 02:06:25.880
|
|
I don't get it.
|
|
|
|
02:06:25.880 --> 02:06:27.280
|
|
And so we were able to calculate a number,
|
|
|
|
02:06:27.280 --> 02:06:28.240
|
|
as I mentioned before,
|
|
|
|
02:06:28.240 --> 02:06:31.640
|
|
where 50% of the PRPC grapey disappears of about 30 hours.
|
|
|
|
02:06:32.600 --> 02:06:33.680
|
|
This has important implications
|
|
|
|
02:06:33.680 --> 02:06:34.680
|
|
for thinking about all the purposes.
|
|
|
|
02:06:34.680 --> 02:06:35.520
|
|
I'm just an idiot then.
|
|
|
|
02:06:35.520 --> 02:06:36.360
|
|
I got more reading to do.
|
|
|
|
02:06:36.360 --> 02:06:37.200
|
|
That's all.
|
|
|
|
02:06:37.200 --> 02:06:39.120
|
|
See, this is the reason why I haven't started teaching it yet
|
|
|
|
02:06:39.120 --> 02:06:40.120
|
|
because I've got more read.
|
|
|
|
02:06:40.120 --> 02:06:41.400
|
|
I don't understand that.
|
|
|
|
02:06:42.600 --> 02:06:44.600
|
|
And that contradiction seems pretty big.
|
|
|
|
02:06:44.600 --> 02:06:46.960
|
|
The whole talk has been explaining
|
|
|
|
02:06:46.960 --> 02:06:49.200
|
|
about how difficult it is to sort this out
|
|
|
|
02:06:49.200 --> 02:06:50.520
|
|
because it is a pre-...
|
|
|
|
02:06:50.520 --> 02:06:52.840
|
|
It is a protein that has alternate forms
|
|
|
|
02:06:52.840 --> 02:06:55.480
|
|
that alternate forms are hard to study.
|
|
|
|
02:06:55.480 --> 02:06:57.000
|
|
And yet now we can express them
|
|
|
|
02:06:57.000 --> 02:06:59.480
|
|
in different models when we want them.
|
|
|
|
02:07:01.920 --> 02:07:03.120
|
|
Tells us that cells are capable
|
|
|
|
02:07:03.120 --> 02:07:05.640
|
|
of degrading both PRPC and PRPC grapey.
|
|
|
|
02:07:05.640 --> 02:07:07.400
|
|
And it raises the question whether PRPC grapey
|
|
|
|
02:07:07.400 --> 02:07:09.720
|
|
is normally found at very low levels in normal cells
|
|
|
|
02:07:09.720 --> 02:07:11.840
|
|
and has a physiological function.
|
|
|
|
02:07:11.840 --> 02:07:13.880
|
|
And that is a very appealing way of thinking about all this
|
|
|
|
02:07:13.880 --> 02:07:15.120
|
|
because it makes much more sense
|
|
|
|
02:07:15.120 --> 02:07:18.040
|
|
than thinking that PRPC grapey is something totally apparent.
|
|
|
|
02:07:18.040 --> 02:07:19.360
|
|
It raises the question of whether or not
|
|
|
|
02:07:19.360 --> 02:07:20.200
|
|
we really have an issue.
|
|
|
|
02:07:20.200 --> 02:07:22.520
|
|
It's a kinetic race between the formation of PRPC grapey
|
|
|
|
02:07:22.520 --> 02:07:24.960
|
|
and the cell's ability to clear PRPC grapey.
|
|
|
|
02:07:24.960 --> 02:07:27.240
|
|
And that when the cell can keep up with the formation
|
|
|
|
02:07:27.240 --> 02:07:30.720
|
|
and clear it like it does with all other proteins in fact,
|
|
|
|
02:07:30.720 --> 02:07:33.280
|
|
when that happens everything is functioning fine.
|
|
|
|
02:07:33.280 --> 02:07:35.320
|
|
But when the cell gets out of balance,
|
|
|
|
02:07:35.320 --> 02:07:39.200
|
|
it can no longer clear PRPC grapey at the rate that it's formed.
|
|
|
|
02:07:39.200 --> 02:07:40.360
|
|
I'm talking about very, very low levels
|
|
|
|
02:07:40.360 --> 02:07:42.880
|
|
that we can't detect even by these animal assays.
|
|
|
|
02:07:42.880 --> 02:07:45.000
|
|
Then something goes awry and we begin to accumulate
|
|
|
|
02:07:45.000 --> 02:07:47.440
|
|
more and more PRPC grapey and eventually the animal gets sick
|
|
|
|
02:07:47.440 --> 02:07:49.320
|
|
and goes on to die or the human being.
|
|
|
|
02:07:50.200 --> 02:07:53.000
|
|
Now, I promised you a little chemistry at the end.
|
|
|
|
02:07:53.000 --> 02:07:54.480
|
|
And if you just look down here at chloropromacy
|
|
|
|
02:07:54.480 --> 02:07:55.920
|
|
and this is thoracine, this is one of the first
|
|
|
|
02:07:55.920 --> 02:07:57.600
|
|
antipsychotic drugs and this is the structure of it
|
|
|
|
02:07:57.600 --> 02:07:59.200
|
|
and it has these three rings.
|
|
|
|
02:07:59.200 --> 02:08:02.240
|
|
And when Karsten Korth added one micromolar, this amount,
|
|
|
|
02:08:02.240 --> 02:08:04.880
|
|
he still saw these protease resistant bands.
|
|
|
|
02:08:04.880 --> 02:08:07.400
|
|
So the three bands are the ones with no sugars,
|
|
|
|
02:08:07.400 --> 02:08:08.800
|
|
one sugar chain and two sugar chains,
|
|
|
|
02:08:08.800 --> 02:08:09.800
|
|
they're shed a little better here.
|
|
|
|
02:08:09.800 --> 02:08:11.320
|
|
So two sugar chains, one and none.
|
|
|
|
02:08:11.320 --> 02:08:12.160
|
|
I'm gonna go back.
|
|
|
|
02:08:12.160 --> 02:08:13.320
|
|
Or even up in here.
|
|
|
|
02:08:13.320 --> 02:08:15.000
|
|
It's a very appealing way of thinking about all this
|
|
|
|
02:08:15.000 --> 02:08:16.640
|
|
because it makes much more sense than thinking
|
|
|
|
02:08:16.640 --> 02:08:19.160
|
|
that PRPC grapey is something totally apparent.
|
|
|
|
02:08:19.200 --> 02:08:20.520
|
|
It raises the question of whether or not
|
|
|
|
02:08:20.520 --> 02:08:22.120
|
|
we really have an issue, it's a kinetic race
|
|
|
|
02:08:22.120 --> 02:08:23.680
|
|
between the formation of PRPC grapey
|
|
|
|
02:08:23.680 --> 02:08:26.120
|
|
and the cells of the clear PRPC grapey.
|
|
|
|
02:08:26.120 --> 02:08:28.360
|
|
And that when the cell can keep up with the formation
|
|
|
|
02:08:28.360 --> 02:08:31.880
|
|
and clear it like it does with all other proteins, in fact,
|
|
|
|
02:08:31.880 --> 02:08:34.440
|
|
when that happens, everything is functioning fine.
|
|
|
|
02:08:34.440 --> 02:08:36.440
|
|
But when the cell gets out of balance,
|
|
|
|
02:08:36.440 --> 02:08:40.360
|
|
it can no longer clear PRPC grapey at the rate that it's formed.
|
|
|
|
02:08:40.360 --> 02:08:41.520
|
|
And we're talking about very, very low levels
|
|
|
|
02:08:41.520 --> 02:08:43.840
|
|
that we can't detect even by these animal assays.
|
|
|
|
02:08:43.840 --> 02:08:46.480
|
|
So very, very low levels, kind of like asymptomatic.
|
|
|
|
02:08:46.480 --> 02:08:50.560
|
|
You're asymptomatic for CAD, all your life.
|
|
|
|
02:08:50.560 --> 02:08:53.320
|
|
And if you lose the race, then you become,
|
|
|
|
02:08:53.320 --> 02:08:57.160
|
|
so it's actually not what a lot of these worst case scenario
|
|
|
|
02:08:57.160 --> 02:09:00.520
|
|
people said, which is you just need one molecule.
|
|
|
|
02:09:00.520 --> 02:09:04.160
|
|
You have one molecule all the time by this hypothesis.
|
|
|
|
02:09:04.160 --> 02:09:06.400
|
|
And it's just a question of whether you fall behind
|
|
|
|
02:09:06.400 --> 02:09:10.280
|
|
with degradation or whether you inherited too much
|
|
|
|
02:09:10.280 --> 02:09:13.680
|
|
to be ever catch up in the beginning or something like that.
|
|
|
|
02:09:14.680 --> 02:09:17.680
|
|
It's extraordinary what is being said here.
|
|
|
|
02:09:17.680 --> 02:09:19.680
|
|
Then something goes awry, and we began to accumulate
|
|
|
|
02:09:19.680 --> 02:09:21.680
|
|
more and more PRPC grapey, and eventually the animal gets sick.
|
|
|
|
02:09:21.680 --> 02:09:22.680
|
|
And it goes on to die.
|
|
|
|
02:09:22.680 --> 02:09:25.680
|
|
And still we're talking about a very specific protein
|
|
|
|
02:09:25.680 --> 02:09:29.680
|
|
with a very specific sequence in a very specific structure.
|
|
|
|
02:09:29.680 --> 02:09:32.680
|
|
And then sometimes we're not.
|
|
|
|
02:09:32.680 --> 02:09:34.680
|
|
Sometimes we're talking about a very specific protein
|
|
|
|
02:09:34.680 --> 02:09:37.680
|
|
with a very specific sequence in a very specific structure
|
|
|
|
02:09:37.680 --> 02:09:39.680
|
|
that has two structures.
|
|
|
|
02:09:39.680 --> 02:09:42.680
|
|
And those two structures, apparently, one of them
|
|
|
|
02:09:42.680 --> 02:09:45.680
|
|
is more stable than the other, so much so that it can cause
|
|
|
|
02:09:45.680 --> 02:09:48.680
|
|
the good one to form the bad one.
|
|
|
|
02:09:48.680 --> 02:09:53.680
|
|
But that part of this cartoon is almost wholly missing
|
|
|
|
02:09:53.680 --> 02:09:56.680
|
|
from the explanation.
|
|
|
|
02:09:56.680 --> 02:09:58.680
|
|
And instead we have incubation times
|
|
|
|
02:09:58.680 --> 02:10:01.680
|
|
and p-value differences between brown mice and white mice
|
|
|
|
02:10:01.680 --> 02:10:04.680
|
|
with two amino acids difference in this protein.
|
|
|
|
02:10:04.680 --> 02:10:08.680
|
|
And then that being a sign that the protein is involved
|
|
|
|
02:10:08.680 --> 02:10:12.680
|
|
in whatever happens.
|
|
|
|
02:10:12.680 --> 02:10:14.680
|
|
Okay, it is 335.
|
|
|
|
02:10:14.680 --> 02:10:16.680
|
|
I need to go to basketball.
|
|
|
|
02:10:16.680 --> 02:10:20.680
|
|
I'm going to play the funny opening that I started with again
|
|
|
|
02:10:20.680 --> 02:10:24.680
|
|
as a way out in case you didn't see it because it's just funny.
|
|
|
|
02:10:24.680 --> 02:10:29.680
|
|
I got a new toy, which is actually a new toy for
|
|
|
|
02:10:29.680 --> 02:10:36.680
|
|
it is a new toy, which I am planning to use on the wheel.
|
|
|
|
02:10:36.680 --> 02:10:40.680
|
|
And also maybe on my motorcycle if we get a little better weather.
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02:10:40.680 --> 02:10:45.680
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And that toy, of course, was a little camera
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02:10:45.680 --> 02:10:47.680
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that allowed me to make this video.
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02:10:47.680 --> 02:10:49.680
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But anyway, thank you very much for joining me.
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02:10:49.680 --> 02:10:52.680
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This has been Giga Ohm Biological, a high-resistance,
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02:10:52.680 --> 02:10:55.680
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low-noise, oh, that's not the right song.
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02:10:55.680 --> 02:10:57.680
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You funny man, that's not the right song.
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02:10:57.680 --> 02:10:59.680
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This is the right song.
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02:10:59.680 --> 02:11:01.680
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That's it.
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02:11:01.680 --> 02:11:07.680
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This has been a production of Giga Ohm Biological.
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02:11:07.680 --> 02:11:11.680
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And this was, of course, not meant to make you take me seriously
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02:11:11.680 --> 02:11:15.680
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as a basketball player, but at least to let you know that I do
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02:11:15.680 --> 02:11:17.680
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actually go to the gym with my kids.
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02:11:17.680 --> 02:11:23.680
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And I'm going to try and figure out a way to make neurobiology
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02:11:23.680 --> 02:11:27.680
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shorts and immunology shorts while I'm shooting around.
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02:11:27.680 --> 02:11:29.680
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And I thought this camera would kind of help me.
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02:11:29.680 --> 02:11:32.680
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It actually works surprisingly well.
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02:11:32.680 --> 02:11:36.680
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It also works surprisingly well on the one wheel.
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02:11:36.680 --> 02:11:39.680
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So I think I'm going to be able to make some shorts
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02:11:39.680 --> 02:11:43.680
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that I haven't been able to make before because I just don't like
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02:11:43.680 --> 02:11:49.680
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putting three GoPros on something and having to edit for hours afterwards.
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02:11:49.680 --> 02:11:52.680
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And that thing seems to have solved that problem a little bit.
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02:11:52.680 --> 02:11:55.680
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I can give a GoPros to my wife for her yoga.
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02:11:55.680 --> 02:11:58.680
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Anyway, thanks very much for joining me.
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02:11:58.680 --> 02:12:03.680
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And when Giga Ohm Biological, we are trying to distribute the knowledge
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02:12:03.680 --> 02:12:07.680
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that can dispel this big E enchantment.
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02:12:07.680 --> 02:12:10.680
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Thanks very much, and we'll see you again soon.
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02:12:28.680 --> 02:12:31.680
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Thank you very much.
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02:12:58.680 --> 02:13:01.680
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Thank you very much.
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