Why Mosquitoes Bite Some People More Than Others
38gVZgE39K8 • 2018-02-07
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Kind: captions Language: en are you the person in the group who is always getting bitten by mosquitoes because I certainly am and science has shown that this is a thing that mosquitoes are more attractive to some people than others and the reason for that is at least partially genetic which is why this video is supported by 23 and me a company that reads sections of your genetic code and then helps you understand what's in there now they've actually been involved in some research that has identified particular spots on your DNA that make you more or less likely to be attractive to mosquitoes and in this video I want to put that to the test so I flew to New Mexico State University to meet Mosquito Man Professor IMO Hansen hello we have a collection of lab strains here he maintains colonies of many different species of mosquitoes and one exotic strain he actually feeds with his own blood no no I'm serious these ones are made from my blood really yes absolutely yeah them I can't ask my students you know that would be a whole a nightmare getting permissions how do you blood feed them well with just sticking your arms I just put my arm in there and wait is it psychologically itchy or no it is really itchy yeah and I'm getting I mean 25 bites or so right now mosquitoes need our blood proteins to make their eggs so only the female mosquitoes bite the eggs hatch into these Wrigley larvae which develop into pupae before becoming flying adult mosquitoes then they once again seek out vertebrate blood to make more eggs the whole life cycle takes just two weeks but what I wanted to know is am I a desirable Target how can we figure out if I'm attractive to mosquitoes okay we have a white tube basically which has a holding chamber we put the mosquitoes down here there's a little fan reducing a draft something like four meters per second we're gonna insert a bait into one of these Chambers and the green or the yellow one so by bait you're saying me yes you exactly you put your hand in there would be good if you would rub your hand first so uh if you're sweating yes exactly it is almost feeds exclusively on humans they are really specialized on biting humans that's good to know yeah there's 20 mosquitoes in the holding chamber and they're going to decide whether to come and find me or go down the other side and they find nothing right we're releasing the mosquitoes yeah I see them coming oh he's chosen wrong do you see that man you are attractive I'm really sorry you are strong attractant to mosquitoes they all went in your direction none of them went the other way yes this is amazing oh there's one I did not I did not expect to have such a strong response like you see all those mosquitoes this type of test was actually used to discover that the basis for our attractiveness to mosquitoes is at least partially genetic researchers recruited 18 pairs of identical female twins and 19 pairs of non-identical or fraternal female twins then they used the y-tube test to evaluate the mosquito attractiveness of each individual measured by the fraction of mosquitoes who correctly flew to the arm of the tube where the twin was standing what scientists found is that the mosquito attractiveness of twins is correlated that is the more attractive you are to mosquitoes the more likely your twin is too but that's not all that surprising and could be caused by environmental factors or a common diet but comparing identical twins to fraternal twins revealed the correlation was higher for identical twins strongly suggests genetics influence how attractive you are to mosquitoes since the identical twins share more of the same genes than fraternal twins this explains why their mosquito attractiveness would be more closely correlated if it really is genetics that determines how much mosquitoes like you with that last test I was clearly attractive to these mosquitoes Yes except we weren't comparing me to any other human we were just comparing me to a control exactly yes no human so what if we compare myself with my wife Raquel normally I get bitten and she doesn't Okay so this should be a good test Maybe to see whether under lab conditions we can reproduce here uh we'll we'll produce our anecdotal findings exactly anecdotal evidence yeah a little once again preparing okay hands in position yeah yeah see they they actually start to wake up they smelled some something something's going on here okay what are we saying whoa I'm getting a good amount over here but so are you let's see I think I'm getting more you it looks to me like you got three okay Wanna Stop The Experiment right now all right okay now let's count I think it's seven on your side here five in the holding five on the holding and quite a few on your side so who got spitting I get bit you get bitten in reality we would repeat this experiment maybe eight times or so right and switching you guys around but um I think this is a good way to show how how this works okay so that result was not particularly scientifically rigorous but it did reproduce our experience in the wild which is that I am much more attractive well at least when it comes to mosquitoes um than Raquel but the question is I guess does this come down to our genetics yeah so we spat into some tubes and sent them off to be tested right and we were interested in seven particular locations on our DNA which were located in a 2017 study that involved 23 and me so the way 23andMe works is when you sign up you can opt in to be part of research and 16 000 people agreed to be part of this study and rate their perceived attractiveness to mosquitoes so then what the scientist did was a genome-wide Association study that is they looked at all the DNA of all of those participants and tried to see if there were commonalities amongst the people who said they were attractive mosquitoes and that were different to the people who said they weren't attractive to mosquitoes and they identified seven particular locations on the DNA seven single letter changes which seem to be associated with different levels of attractiveness to mosquitoes so we have our results back and do you want to see them I do I do I'm very curious all right um let's pull it up here okay so of the seven locations that are related to Mosquito attractiveness it turns out we have the identical DNA at four of them so you can rule those out which leaves only three areas where we actually have differing DNA so at the first location you have one copy of a letter change which actually makes you significantly protected from mosquitoes oh no yeah it's associated with decreased attractive to mosquitoes I do not have any letter changes at that location uh now at the second location where we differ I have a letter change compared to you that makes me uh less attractive to mosquitoes so more protected interesting if you look at the significance of those two letter changes yours is about twice as significant okay than mine but still we both have a protective letter switch so in the last snip we actually differ significantly and I have two copies of a variant that makes me more attractive to mosquitoes this was the only snip which was associated with being more attractive to mosquitoes and I have two copies of that change and you have no copies of that change so let me know if that makes sense so overall I would say our genetics really adds up here and of course we can't say that this proves that it is right but it is definitely consistent with these Snips actually being associated with your attractiveness to mosquitoes and that sort of borne out by our experience so cool now it's unclear exactly how these genetic changes might make us more or less attractive to mosquitoes but it's likely that it has something to do with the odor or the volatile chemicals that our bodies give off and due to the microbiome the bacteria on our skin one of the main signals that mosquitoes like to follow is carbon dioxide so that means if you have a higher metabolism or if you've just been exercising or if you're a bigger person or even if you're pregnant you are more likely to attract mosquitoes but mosquitoes are also attracted to some other volatiles that we give off things like lactic acid acetone and ammonia but scientists have also found some chemicals that repel or appear to impair mosquitoes ability to find us those chemicals we naturally give off are octanal nonanal decanal and six-methyl 5-heptin to own so why is this important well the researchers estimate that our attractiveness to mosquitoes is about as hereditary as height or IQ that is to say genetics play a significant role here so understanding that relationship is really important especially when you consider that of all the animals mosquitoes have the greatest impact on human health are mosquitoes the worst animal of all time for humans absolutely absolutely there's no question about that malaria has killed more people than people have killed people they are the most dangerous animal in the world by some estimates mosquitoes have killed more than half of the humans who have ever lived now that estimate has been debated and is likely too high but even so this year over a million people will die of mosquito-borne illnesses so if not half certainly a significant number of humans have died due to mosquitoes probably more than any other single cause which led me to wonder do you think humans may have evolved this trait to smell worse to mosquitoes as an adaptation to avoid the diseases or is it just by accident that some people are less attractive to mosquitoes than others that is a really good question and while we're on the subject of evolution consider this if you ever contract malaria it actually changes your body chemistry to make you produce an odor that makes you more attractive to mosquitoes think about that the malaria parasite has evolved so that when it's in its host it makes the host more attractive to mosquitoes mosquitoes are the thing that transmit malaria it's phenomenal I mean evolution is incredible this episode of veritasium is supported by 23 and me a company whose name comes from the fact that humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes and the point of the company is to help people understand what's written in your chromosomes now at the minute you can't get access to the mosquito attractiveness test but maybe one day in the future you will be able to right now you can access tons of information about your physical traits about aspects of your health and about where your DNA and I guess you come from so I thought I would share my results with you I come from all over the world as you can see from the map but significantly more from Europe about 95 European you can drill down into that and see that I'm largely British and Irish and French and German with a bit of Scandinavian what's interesting to me is there's a 3.3 percent South Asian which is something I think my family suspected but didn't know for sure so it's interesting the types of information you can find out which is stored in your DNA so if you want to find out about the information in your DNA you can go to 23andme.com veritasium so I want to thank 23andMe for supporting veritasium and I want to thank you for watching
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