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  • What you're looking at are tiny spores of Aspergillus,

  • a type of fungus that can find its way into your lungs through air conditioning units.

  • And this here is a rotifer, a microscopic animal that loves aquatic environments.

  • These nearly invisible bits can hitch a ride on your clothes, find their way into your body,

  • and could have an impact on your overall health.

  • They're part of your exposomeand everyone has one.

  • Your exposome is all the things you're exposed to, comprised of biologicals

  • so, things like pollen and microbes

  • but also in your exposome is the chemical exposure.

  • So, that would be carcinogens, toxins that might be in the environment.

  • Some of them are natural.

  • You can actually smell when it's going to rain, because the air pressure drops, and

  • there's a compound called geosmin that actually comes out of the ground.

  • Dr. Michael Snyder is a pioneering geneticist who's investigating the exposome,

  • and he doesn't mind making this research personal.

  • I make billions of measurements on me all the time.

  • I use about eight of these devices.

  • I have three smart watches on me right now.

  • So, these three here.

  • This ring is not really a ring, it's actually a sensor.

  • It measures heart rate, and sleep and things like that.

  • According to Dr. Snyder, our health is a combination of genetics and environment.

  • And right now, we know a lot about the genetics side.

  • It really first started in 1985, when people launched the Human Genome Project.

  • In the future, doctors will likely be able to give each of us a genetic report card."

  • We are here to celebrate the completion of the first survey of the entire human genome.

  • Without a doubt, this is the most important, most wondrous map ever produced by humankind.”

  • Your genome is really your blueprint for life.

  • They're arranged in a very specific fashion, and what's incredible is there are 6 billion

  • of these letters in each person.

  • And that's what dictates you going from a single egg that gets fertilized, turning into

  • this walking, talking, speaking, human being.

  • We're now about 10 million times cheaper in sequencing DNA than we were back in 1985.

  • But it really is just a piece of the whole equation.

  • People always studied environmental exposures at kind of a city level.

  • We kind of know what the exposure looks like in New York City, versus San Francisco,

  • versus Atlanta.

  • They would study something called PM2.5.

  • It's particulate matter that's 2.5 microns or less.

  • And that's what gets into your lungs, and that's what's in the air pollution

  • that people are concerned about.

  • And so far as personalized efforts go: It's usually taking surveys.

  • Like, you have survey of 100 questions about whether you have been smoking, whether you

  • have drinking, whether you suspect somebody was coughing next to you.

  • It was never measured directly.

  • You could be sitting right now in a vast sea of chemicals that you're breathing right this

  • moment, and you would have no way of knowing that.

  • The one hole that we always saw was in fact your exposome.

  • To fill the gap, Dr. Snyder launched a project to catalog personal exposomes on a deeper level.

  • They re-designed an air-monitoring device, and gave it to 15 volunteers to wear

  • in and around the San Francisco Bay Area for varying time intervals.

  • The exposimeter, basically, has a pump that sucks up air roughly about 1/15th of what

  • you would normally breathe, and it pulls the air and captures all the particulates.

  • The monitor contains a biological compatible filter that collects virus, fungi, bacteria.

  • Underneath this filter we have a specialized compartment, and it sucks up

  • all kinds of volatile chemicals.

  • Then, we're using approach to extract things off the filter.

  • Then they became DNA and RNA at that point.

  • We process them into the next general sequencing library using another bunch of molecular techniques

  • and then submit them to the sequencing machine.

  • Though Snyder only tested 15 participants, he had over 70 billion readouts

  • meaning participants were bombarded with diverse fungi, protozoa, and allergens

  • that we couldn't see in detail before.

  • The chemicals went through a separate process.

  • We put that in a specialized equipment called a mass spectrometer.

  • And we can see thousands of chemicals.

  • These are all the things that you're presumably breathing and getting exposed to in your skin,

  • and everywhere else.

  • The results are these exposome clouds.

  • It's your personal air bubble, mapped in detail.

  • Some of our biggest findings are that the exposome is huge.

  • We discovered 2,500 species.

  • And the mass spec analysis added roughly 3,000 chemical signatures to the mix.

  • We discovered the exposome is vast.

  • We discovered it's dynamic.

  • We can classify these exposures as bacterial dominant, fungal dominant,

  • plant dominant, or mixed.

  • And what we've discovered is that they'll vary from location to location.

  • We see plastics in every single sample we looked at.

  • We see this compound DEET, which

  • is the thing you put in "Off" to keep insects off of you.

  • So, there must be a lot of it floating around in the air.

  • There's certain organisms you'll see in the San Francisco sample, a particular bacteria

  • found in sludge, that we didn't see in other samples.

  • Now, this is just with 15 people, so Snyder wants to launch a 1,000 person study next

  • to tackle even bigger questions.

  • What have we done that's really affected people's health?

  • It's a little early for that.

  • We mostly have just been cataloging what is in the exposome in terms of bacteria and chemicals.

  • That really is the next step.

  • We want to learn exactly what exposures are doing to individual people's health.

  • People have different allergies, they have different asthma conditions, some people would

  • be more sensitive to certain chemicals than others.

  • We don't really understand how this whole thing works.

  • There's so much we don't know,

  • and this is why we went after this.

  • By mapping the microbial soup that surrounds us, Snyder hopes that it could transform the

  • way we manage our health on a daily basis.

  • I'd like to really switch us from what I call hunch-based medicine to data-driven medicine.

  • A physician only has 15 minutes to actually figure you out in the time you visit.

  • So, I think really in the future, no one's going to figure out you

  • better than you can figure out you.

  • I think this is where data driven medicine can be extremely impactful.

  • Curious about what your exposome looks like?

  • Let us know in the comments below and subscribe to Seeker for more science videos.

What you're looking at are tiny spores of Aspergillus,

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あなたの目に見えないエクスポゾームがあなたの健康を害しているかもしれない方法 (How Your Invisible Exposome Could Be Messing With Your Health)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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