Steve McCarroll: How data is helping us unravel the mysteries of the brain
Steve McCarroll is conducting groundbreaking research on the causes of mental illness. Full bio
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in her neck and arm
that science has of cancer.
about how she was doing
became available every few years.
that she was struggling heroically
an innovative new medical treatment
this Thanksgiving with?
many people in this room,
even in a decade --
to have a specific illness.
were classmates in graduate school.
more disorganized.
got a job in a store ...
he started hearing voices
were following him.
the best drug they could.
somewhat quieter,
or his social connectedness.
and work and friends.
so much to offer my sister,
millions of people like Robert?
estimates that brain illnesses
and major depression
of lost years of life and work.
often strike early in life,
their educations, starting careers,
to work at one's full potential;
tragedies harder to measure:
to pursue dreams and ideas.
there's profound medical progress
is a great example,
of heart disease.
millions of heart attacks and strokes.
of profound medical progress
that matter to an illness,
and measure those molecules in the body,
to interfere with those molecules
again and again and again.
that strategy has been limited,
nearly enough, yet,
matter to each illness,
matter to each illness.
I want to tell you about today.
with which we try to turn the brain
I worked in computers and math,
of the right kinds of data
and learn how it works.
are transforming
in biology and medicine, too.
the right kinds of data.
about the right things.
new technologies and ideas.
the scientists in my lab.
two short stories from our work.
into a big-data problem
and built from billions of cells.
they're specialists.
of different cellular careers,
the cell types in our body
we don't even know today
of most of those talks would be.
important things about cell types.
in size and shape.
that the other doesn't respond to,
been reaching these insights
all of this quickly and systematically.
all of the molecules
into a kind of cellular smoothie.
of the average cell --
how a big city like New York works,
by reviewing some statistics
and important and exciting
and the specializations.
the brain not as a cellular smoothie
data about and learn from
a technology for doing that.
tens of thousands of individual cells,
it's greeted by a tiny bead,
of DNA bar code molecules.
a different bar code sequence
transcripts it's making
that it's using to do its job.
of these combined molecules
because we use droplets
to tag and inventory
of individual cells.
how to learn as much as we can
people used to tell us,
the go-to for every major brain project."
is generating lots of exciting data.
their own Drop-seq system from scratch.
downloaded from our lab website
that any scientist could use
from Drop-seq experiments,
30,000 times in the past two years.
about discoveries that they've made
to make a human cell atlas.
of the cell types in the human body
that each cell type uses to do its job.
a second challenge that we face
into a big data problem.
we'd like to learn from the brains
accessible while we're living.
if we can't hold the molecules?
the most informative molecules, proteins,
to make all of our proteins.
from person to person to person
to vary from person to person
makes of each protein.
and it's all genetics,
that we learned about in school.
than a single pigment molecule.
as the function of our brains
of thousands of genes.
varies meaningfully
combination of that variation.
possible to make progress
are sharing the data with one another
about a discovery we recently made
by 50,000 people from 30 countries,
to genetic research on schizophrenia.
on risk of schizophrenia
in our immune system.
was responsible.
a new way to analyze DNA with computers,
very surprising.
"complement component 4" --
in different people's genomes,
make different amounts
C4 protein our genes make,
in a complex system.
a molecule that matters.
were known for a long time
molecular Post-it note
gets put on lots of debris
to eliminate them.
that the C4 Post-it note
of synapses is a normal part
synapses all the time.
that in schizophrenia,
may go into overdrive.
they're excited about this discovery,
on complement proteins for years
about how they work.
that interfere with complement proteins,
in the brain as well as the immune system.
that might address a root cause
by many scientists over many years
scientific approaches
that are centuries old.
in our genomes
to the next molecular insight
use these genes in different combinations.
work to generate
from that data,
are just two ways
into a big data problem.
are creating a technology
connections in the brain
to which other neurons
throughout life and during illness.
to test in a single tube
of different people's genomes
people with diverse backgrounds
math, statistics, engineering.
rally people with diverse interests
that we could hope to create?
about what causes cancer,
to personal psychological characteristics,
of the true biological causes of cancer.
leads to innovative medicine
so much work to do,
who have been cured of cancers
a generation ago.
like my sister
that they didn't take for granted
to create around mental illness --
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Steve McCarroll - GeneticistSteve McCarroll is conducting groundbreaking research on the causes of mental illness.
Why you should listen
Steve McCarroll and the scientists in his lab use human genetics, molecular biology and engineering to create new ways of studying the human brain, reveal the ways in which genomes vary from person to person and discover the molecular and cellular processes that underlie brain illness. McCarroll and his team at Harvard have linked schizophrenia to specific gene variations that recruit immune molecules into "pruning" synapses in the brain, a discovery that is leading toward new ways of thinking about the biological basis of schizophrenia and new approaches for discovering medicines.
Prior to leading his lab, McCarroll earned his PhD in neuroscience at the University of California, San Francisco. He is also currently serving as Director of Genetics for the Broad Institute's Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research.
Steve McCarroll | Speaker | TED.com