Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • [Music]

  • A war has been raging for billions of years,

  • killing trillions every single day, while we don't even notice.

  • The war is fought by the single deadliest entity on our planet:

  • the bacteriophage

  • or 'phage' for short.

  • [Intro + Music]

  • A phage is a virus;

  • not quite alive,

  • not quite dead.

  • Also, they look as if someone made them up.

  • Their head is an icosahedron,

  • a sort of dice with 20 faces and 30 edges.

  • It contains the genetic material of the virus

  • and often sits on a long tail that has leg-like fibers.

  • There are more phages on earth than every other organism combined,

  • including bacteria.

  • And they are probably everywhere living things exist.

  • Billions are on your hands, in your intestines and your eyelids right now.

  • Which might make you nervous since phages are responsible for the majority of deaths on earth

  • but you're lucky.

  • While they do commit genocide for breakfast,

  • they only kill bacteria.

  • Up to 40% of all bacteria in the oceans are killed by them every single day.

  • But phages also have major flaws.

  • Like any other virus, phages need a host to survive and reproduce.

  • They're not much more than genetic material in a hull

  • and they specialize.

  • Usually, a phage has chosen one specific bacteria

  • and maybe some of its very close relatives.

  • These are its prey.

  • Imagine a phage as like a cruise missile that only hunts and kills members of one very unlucky family.

  • When a phage finds its victim,

  • it connects its tail fibers with receptors and uses a sort of syringe to puncture a surface.

  • In a weird motion, the phage squeezes its tail and injects its genetic information.

  • Within minutes, the bacteria is taken over.

  • It's now forced to manufacture all the parts of new phages.

  • They only stop when the bacteria is filled up with brand-new phages.

  • In the final step,

  • they produce 'endolysin',

  • a powerful enzyme that punches a hole in the bacteria.

  • The pressure is so high that the bacteria sort of vomits out all of its insides and dies.

  • New phages are released and begin the cycle anew.

  • In the last few years,

  • bacteriophages have enjoyed the attention of the second deadliest beings on earth:

  • humans.

  • Recently, we've started looking into injecting millions of them into our bodies

  • because we're sort of getting desperate;

  • we screwed up.

  • In the past a single cut or a sip from the wrong puddle could kill you.

  • Bacteria were our phages.

  • Tiny monsters that hunted us mercilessly.

  • But then, about 100 years ago, we found a solution in nature.

  • By accident, we found fungi that produced compounds that killed bacteria:

  • antibiotics.

  • Suddenly, we had a powerful super weapon.

  • Antibiotics were so effective that we stopped thinking of bacteria as monsters.

  • Only the old and the weakest among us were killed by them.

  • We used antibiotics more and more for less and less serious causes.

  • We lost respect for the monsters and the weapon

  • But bacteria are living things that evolve and one by one they started to become immune against our weapons.

  • This continued until we had created what are called 'superbugs',

  • bacteria immune to almost everything we have.

  • This immunity is spreading across the world as we speak.

  • By 2050, superbugs could kill more humans a year than cancer.

  • The days when a cut or bladder infection or a cough could kill you or your loved ones are coming back.

  • In the US alone, more than 23,000 people die from resistant bacteria each year.

  • But it turns out that phages, our tiny killer virus robots, could save us.

  • We can inject them into our bodies to help cure infections.

  • Hold on, how could injecting millions of viruses into an infection be a good idea?

  • Phages are very very specialized killers of bacteria.

  • So specialized, in fact, that humans are completely immune to them;

  • we are too different.

  • We encounter billions of phages every day and we just politely ignore each other.

  • Antibiotics are like carpet bombing, killing everything even the good bacteria in our intestines that we don't want to harm

  • Phages are like guided missiles that only attack what they're supposed to

  • Wait a minute, if we use phages to kill bacteria, won't bacteria develop ways of defending themselves?

  • Well, it's more complex than that; phages evolved too.

  • There has been an arms race between them and bacteria for billions of years and so far, they're doing great.

  • This makes phages smart weapons that are constantly getting better at killing.

  • But even if bacteria were to become immune against our phage, we still might be able to win.

  • It turns out that in order to become resistant to even just a few species of phages,

  • bacteria have to give up their resistance to antibiotics.

  • We might be able to trap them in a catch-22.

  • This has already been successfully tested with a patient who had no other hope left

  • The bacteria 'Pseudomonas Aeruginosa', one of the most feared bacteria, infected the man's chest cavity.

  • They are naturally resistant to most antibiotics

  • and can even survive an alcoholic hand gel.

  • After years of suffering, a few thousand phages were directly inserted into his chest cavity

  • together with antibiotics the bacteria were immune to.

  • After a few weeks, the infections had completely disappeared.

  • Unfortunately, this treatment is still experimental and pharma companies are still reluctant to invest the necessary billions

  • in a treatment that has no official approval yet.

  • But things are finally changing.

  • In 2016, the largest phage clinical trial to date began and phages are getting more and more attention.

  • and we better get used to it because the era in which antibiotics have been our super weapon is drawing to a close.

  • It might be a weird concept but injecting the deadliest being on planet Earth

  • directly into our bodies could save millions of lives

  • This video was made possible by a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

  • If you'd like to support Kurzgesagt, you can do so on patreon.com/Kurzgesagt and get fancy things in return.

[Music]

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it