James Logan: How we're using dogs to sniff out malaria
詹姆斯·洛根: 怎样用狗嗅出疟疾
Professor James Logan leads an internationally renowned research program at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, presents television programs and has a passion for science and natural history. Full bio
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killers on the planet.
地球上最大的杀手之一。
in the last 20 years,
疟疾研究领域取得了卓越的进步,
is still at risk from this disease.
正面临疟疾的威胁。
dies from malaria.
when it comes to tackling malaria,
我们依然面临很多挑战。
infected with malaria in the first place.
携带者很不容易。
some level of immunity to the disease,
有一定程度的免疫力,
and become infectious and still pass it on
在感染后把病毒传给其他人,
表现出疟疾感染征兆。
because how do you find those people?
因为,要怎样才能找到这群人呢?
for a needle in a haystack.
to solve this problem for some years,
寻找解决这个问题的方法,
may have been right under our noses
with lots of really important statistics,
有很多非常重要的数据,
to just relax a little bit
a little bit as well.
a nice deep breath in ...
让大家大吃一惊。
just through your nose,
the environment around you.
好好感知一下周围的环境。
the person who's sitting next to you.
闻闻坐在你身边的那位,
right into their armpit,
have a good old sniff,
sensory experience there.
something rather pleasant,
something a little bit less pleasant,
闻到的不是那么令人愉快的气味,
bad breath or body odor.
a good reason
don't like certain body smells.
being associated with a smell.
和某种气味有紧密联系。
smells like baked brown bread,
像靠烤黑面包的味道。
of a butcher shop, like raw meat.
at the sort of words that are used
gets a bit of bad reputation.
not exactly as a compliment, are you.
to turn that on its head.
think about smell in a positive way,
by our bodies when we're ill,
that would allow us to do this,
帮我们来做这个工作,
best sensors actually already exist,
早已存在于这个世界,
according to their nose.
really important information
and you've entered this room.
a really complex world.
with smells from everywhere.
that we're really smelly beasts.
是一群有异味的家伙。
different volatile chemicals.
不同的易挥发化学物质。
it's the seats you're sitting on,
the carpet to the floor,
is producing an odor,
that the mosquito has to fly through,
一个非常复杂的世界,
within that really complex world.
这复杂的世界里找到你。
gets bitten by mosquitoes?
annoying people that never get bitten.
从没有被蚊子咬过。
has a really hard job to find you,
with the way you smell.
mosquitoes smell repellent,
我是说蚊子讨厌的味道,
controlled by our genes.
a highly sophisticated sense of smell,
all the, sort of, odor sludge
and bite you as a blood meal.
if one of you was infected with malaria?
感染了疟疾,那会发生什么呢?
at the malaria life cycle.
has to bite somebody to become infected.
通过叮咬人导致感染。
through the mouth part into the gut
through the gut, creates cysts,
all the way to the salivary glands,
back into another person
会从唾液腺通过唾液
because it injects saliva as it bites.
it goes through a whole other cycle,
a liver stage, changes shape,
into the bloodstream again,
will become infectious.
about the parasite world
有一点我们是知道的,
at manipulating their hosts
通过操纵它们的宿主
in the malaria system,
to do with odor that they manipulate,
between mosquitoes.
manipulation hypothesis,
working on over the last few years.
that we wanted to do in our study
an infection with malaria
to mosquitoes or not.
we designed an experiment
我和同事们设计了个实验,
children in Kenya, sleep inside tents.
肯尼亚的孩子在帐篷里睡觉。
into a chamber which contained mosquitoes,
装有蚊子的实验间,
behaviorally respond.
or fly away from the odors,
they liked them or not.
were infected with malaria,
有的是疟疾病毒感染者,
had any symptoms whatsoever.
都丝毫没有疟疾症状。
it was really quite staggering.
是相当令人震惊的。
than people who were uninfected.
attracted to the child,"
接受治疗之前和之后的数据。
before treatment and after treatment.
a group of people who are uninfected,
towards the right-hand side,
that they're infectious.
when people are infectious
significantly more attractive.
the children treatment
attractive trait that was there
cleared the infection.
were more attractive,
疟原虫通过操纵宿主
was manipulating its host in some way
to attract more mosquitoes
was find out what it was
the body odor from the participants,
身上搜集体味,
bags around their feet,
the volatile odors from their feet,
to mosquitoes.
Anybody got cheesy feet back there?
你们中有谁有这种脚气吗?
and we collected the body odor.
我们还采集了体味。
and olfaction, their sense of smell,
化学物质,问题就简单多了,
just one chemical that they detected,
the right ratios,
化学浓度,适当的比例
like a musical composition.
你可以把这想象成一份乐谱。
or you play it too loud or too soft,
或者你演奏得太大声或者太小声,
an ingredient wrong
it doesn't taste right.
味道就不对了。
in the right combination.
are not particularly good
在识别气味发出的信号方面
it's quite complex.
这个过程挺复杂的。
and what we do in my laboratory
to the antennae of a mosquito.
to individual cells within the antennae,
的细胞连接在一起,
when you're doing this,
做这个实验的时候打喷嚏,
嗅觉感受器的回应,
of the smell receptors in the antennae,
what a mosquito is smelling.
这是怎么回事。
what this looks like.
when I press this button,
with this response.
sort of blow a raspberry,
potential when we stop the odor.
就不会再出现任何回应。
that you've seen an insect smelling
亲眼看见了昆虫闻气味的过程,
it's a weird concept, isn't it?
挺奇怪的概念,不是吗?
what the insect is detecting.
with our malaria samples,
what the mosquito was detecting,
compounds, mainly aldehydes,
化学成分,主要是醛类化合物,
that signified the malaria signal here.
传达了疟疾在这里的信号。
what the smell of malaria is,
of malaria actually is.
put a harness on a little mosquito
and see if we can sniff people
actually find people with malaria,
that's not really possible.
that we can do that with.
帮我们完成这样的任务。
sense of smell,
more special about them:
familiar with this concept at airports,
对这一幕比较熟悉,
and sniff out your luggage or yourself
你的行李箱或你,
or even food as well.
易爆物或者食物。
could we actually train dogs
called Medical Detection Dogs
慈善组织进行了合作,
to learn the smell of malaria.
识别疟疾的气味。
and did some more odor collection
更多的气味样本,其中一部分
and uninfected,
而另一部分是未感染的儿童。
nylon stockings,
to run the experiment.
and tell you about that experiment works,
看看实验是怎样进行的,
with children or animals live,
和小孩或者动物打交道,
the real star of the show.
if you can all just be a little bit quiet,
environment for Freya.
That would be great.
is basically, we're going to ask Freya
of contraptions here,
contraptions, we have a pot,
worn by a child in the Gambia.
冈比亚小孩子穿过的袜子。
by children who were uninfected,
未被疟疾感染的孩子穿过的,
by a child who was infected with malaria.
imagine these were people,
想象这些装置就是人群,
and have a good sniff.
when she senses the malaria,
in this very strange environment,
因为环境对它而言是很陌生的。
Mark didn't know.
的袜子在哪个容器里。
Sarah, was that correct?
莎拉,它找对了吗?
芙蕾雅 ,太精彩了!
That is fantastic. Whew.
the pots around a little bit,
the one with malaria away,
的容器拿走,
that are containing socks from children
down the line and not stop at all.
走过那一排而不会停留。
谁没有感染病毒,
people who are not infected,
在冰箱里保存了好几年,
for a couple of years now,
giving off a big signal.
他发出的信号会较强。
for Freya, Mark and Sarah.
送给芙蕾雅,莎拉和马克。
She's going to get a treat later.
待会儿它会得到奖励。
for your own eyes.
I was quite nervous about it.
我刚才其实挺紧张的。
and when we do this,
can correctly tell us
81 percent of the time.
when somebody does not have an infection.
谁没有被疟疾感染。
are actually above the criteria
for a diagnostic.
at deploying dogs in countries,
and working on at the moment
empower the individual
when you're infected with malaria
它可以从你的汗水中测出病毒,
technical, perhaps:
when you're infected with malaria.
感染了疟疾病毒的智能表。
and we can collect data,
我们还可以从手机提取数据,
that we can collect on a global scale.
采集的数据量有多大。
the spread of diseases,
追踪疾病传播的方法,
and respond to disease outbreaks,
以及回应疾病爆发的方式,
to the eradication of malaria,
that we already know have a smell.
其他一些疾病也带有味道,
to find out what those smells are,
发现那些气味是什么,
with coming up with new ideas,
是想出新的主意,
greatest problems,
has already done this for us,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
James Logan - Biologist, medical entomologistProfessor James Logan leads an internationally renowned research program at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, presents television programs and has a passion for science and natural history.
Why you should listen
Professor James Logan's research group explores the complex interaction between arthropod vectors, and his groundbreaking research has led to the discovery of novel methods for the control of vectors that transmit pathogens that cause diseases such as malaria, Zika, dengue, trachoma and Lyme disease. His work extends into field evaluation of vector control tools in developing countries, and his recent research discovered that malaria infection causes changes in our body odor, making us more attractive to mosquitoes. He's now working on translating that to develop a novel, non-invasive diagnostic for malaria.
Logan is a Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society and has a first-class BSc honours degree in Zoology from the University of Aberdeen and an award-winning PhD, which he completed in 2005. He is also an entrepreneur, having spun out two companies from his University, and holds the position of Director and Founder of ARCTEC and Director and Founder of Vecotech Ltd. Logan regularly advises UK government departments on aspects of vector biology, invasive species and vector control.
James Logan | Speaker | TED.com