Avoiding, Treating & Curing Cancer With the Immune System | Dr. Alex Marson - podcast episode cover

Avoiding, Treating & Curing Cancer With the Immune System | Dr. Alex Marson

Mar 09, 20262 hr 27 minEp. 271
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Summary

This episode features Dr. Alex Marson, who demystifies the immune system, explaining both innate and adaptive immunity. He details how cancer arises through genetic mutations and explores everyday factors that influence cancer risk. The discussion then shifts to cutting-edge immunotherapies like CAR T-cell therapy and the revolutionary CRISPR gene-editing technology, highlighting their current clinical applications and future potential. Ethical considerations surrounding gene editing in humans are also addressed.

Episode description

Dr. Alex Marson, MD, PhD, is a Senior Investigator at the Gladstone Institutes and a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. We discuss the biology of the immune system and cancer, and everyday choices that can increase or decrease your cancer risk, several of which are surprising but all of which are actionable. We also discuss immunotherapy, including how engineered T-cells can be used to defeat childhood and adult cancers. Dr. Marson explains CRISPR and gene editing to cure diseases, and we address the ethical questions surrounding gene editing in embryos, children and adults. This discussion is for anyone interested in avoiding cancer and/or seeking to understand the science and practical applications of immune- or gene-therapy.

Read the show notes at hubermanlab.com.

Thank you to our sponsors

AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman

BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/huberman

Helix Sleep: https://helixsleep.com/huberman

LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman

Function: https://functionhealth.com/huberman

Timestamps

(00:00:00) Alex Marson

(00:02:21) Diseases & Current Biological Landscape; AI & Computational Tools

(00:05:56) Immune System, Innate vs Adaptive Immune System

(00:10:55) Thymus, T Cell Selection; B Cells & Antibodies

(00:13:23) Sponsors: BetterHelp & Helix Sleep

(00:16:11) Immune System Health, Sleep, Diet; Genes

(00:20:56) Childhood Exposure & Allergy Prevention; Autoimmune Reactions

(00:25:27) Whole Body Immune Response, Cytokines & Fever; Antibiotics

(00:30:51) Cancer; Mutations & Cell Regulation; Smoking, BRCA Mutations, Sunlight

(00:38:27) BRAC Mutations, Mutagens, Pesticides

(00:42:33) Sponsor: AG1

(00:43:57) X-Rays & Airport Scanners, Carcinogen vs Mutagen, Charred Meat, Food Dye

(00:49:34) Immune-Based Cancer Treatment, Checkpoint Inhibitors, CAR T-Cell Therapy

(00:59:04) CRISPR, Immunotherapies

(01:02:52) Age & Cancer Risk; CAR T-Cells, Targets & Side Effects; Ketogenic Diet

(01:08:27) CRISPR Discovery & Mechanism

(01:17:06) CRISPR Precision, Risk & Benefit; CRISPR Technology Evolution

(01:20:57) Sponsor: LMNT

(01:22:17) CRISPR Cell Delivery, Clinical Trials; Treating Early Cancers & Prevention

(01:33:47) Liposomes, Engineered Viruses, Lipid Nanoparticles (LNPs), Vaccines

(01:39:57) COVID Pandemic & Trust in Science, mRNA Vaccine

(01:47:51) Sponsor: Function

(01:49:39) Drug Delivery to Cancer, Immunotoxins, T-Cell Engagers; AI Protein Targets

(01:55:45) CRISPR Embryo Modification, Ethics; Heritable Gene Editing, Diversity

(02:05:42) Deep Sequencing Embryos, Diversity; Overcoming Adversity & Resilience

(02:10:44) Upcoming Therapeutics, Autoimmunity & CAR T-Cells, CRISPR & Gene Function

(02:17:55) Banking T Cells or iPSCs?, Future of Cell Programming

(02:24:41) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube, Spotify & Apple Follow, Reviews & Feedback, Sponsors, Protocols Book, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter

Disclaimer & Disclosures

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Alex Marson

We're living in this amazing moment of biology where we can put a gene that encodes something on the surface of T cells that will make them programmed to search and destroy for cancer cells. This is largely known as CAR T cells, chimeric antigen receptor. This is a receptor that it was designed in a lab does not exist in nature. When those T cells get reinfused into a patient the way that you get like a a blood transfusion.

Those cars are directed to go against cancers. Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast. I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest today is Dr. Alex Marson. Dr. Alex Marson is a medical doctor and scientist at the University of California, San Francisco. He is developing new ways to reprogram the immune system to cure cancer.

Today we discuss how your immune system works, how autoimmunity works, and how gene editing and other new technologies can be successfully leveraged to defeat childhood and adult cancer. doctor Marson is truly one of a kind in his understanding of the clinical aspects of cancer treatment, the science of the immune system, and, as you'll soon hear, in explaining the things that genuinely increase your cancer risk.

Many of which are surprising, and the actionable steps that we can all take to reduce our probability of getting cancer. In addition to the usual factors, smoking, UV light, and environmental toxins such as pesticides, we discuss the actual cancer risks that come from things like eating charred meats, airport scanners, and food additives, and how to gauge your individual level of risk.

We also explore gene editing for reversing diseases, which until recently was science fiction, but now is a reality. By the end of today's episode, thanks to Dr. Marson, you'll have the most up-to-date understanding of the state-of-the-art science for cancer prevention and treatment, knowledge that is certain to impact you or a close friend or family member in your life. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.

It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, today's episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Dr. Alex Morrison. Doctor Alex Morson, welcome. Andrew.

Diseases & Current Biological Landscape; AI & Computational Tools

This is the first time that we're going to have a serious discussion about the immune system, cancer, and gene editing technologies on this podcast. So I'm delighted that you're here. It's also great to see you again. Thank you for having me. Really really good to see you. It's been a while. Let's start off with the big picture. Uh how are we doing? How's uh how's biology looking? How's medicine looking? Are we uh are we on the fast track to much better things? Are we

I'm gonna slog along for another ten years before we have cures to the many concerns that people have about cancer, Alzheimer's and the rest, or are you encouraged by what's happening right now? Aaron Ross Powell I think maybe there's some some The general public doesn't quite know how excited biologists are about what's possible. And maybe we've overpromised, maybe in the past we've said we're on the brink of curing disease and people haven't seen it.

But something is materially different right now. And there is a convergence of so many different ways of understanding biology, but then not having that stop at understanding, but to actually intervene and at the root causes of disease. And Over the course of this conversation, I imagine we're gonna talk about DNA sequencing. understanding cells but going all the way to rewriting specific DNA sequences inside of the cells of our immune system.

Doing this not one at a time, but testing every gene and understanding pieces of DNA throughout our entire genome to understand what controls our cells. And then being able to take that information and actually do something about it to boost our immune system, to go after cancer, to balance it in for inflammation and autoimmunity and

That doesn't just have to be sort of searching for a pill. All of a sudden we can actually talk to our own cells and give them instructions in the language of DNA and the language of molecular biology. And in some t instances this is being done with CRISPR, but it's also being done with lipid nanoparticles and vaccines. And we're still inventing new ways of giving these instructions, but all of a sudden medicine

Is programming the behavior of cells in a way that's much more directed than was ever conceivable before. Like there's really a step function in what's imaginable and achievable in medicine. Super exciting. Do you think that molecular biology and genetic engineering and or AI are the reasons that things are on this accelerated timeline? Yes is the answer. All of those things. I think we can do experiments at a different level of scale. We can generate data

And then we have the computational tools, incl including AI, but we have computational sophistication to actually extract insights from massive amounts of data. And you know, I think historically biology We were at it was an observational science. If you especially if you wanted to study things in in humans, there wasn't a way to intervene. Now all of a sudden we're taking human cells, we're putting taking them into the lab and making genetic changes.

and reading out the consequences and directly being able to observe the effect. And w we have all that we have tools to do this with imaging, we have the tools to do this with DNA sequencing. And we can take this all the way into clinical trials and see what are the what are the consequences when we actually go after targeted DNA sequences and make our cells better at treating disease.

Immune System, Innate vs Adaptive Immune System

Would you mind educating us about the immune system a bit? The adaptive and the innate immune system, some of the major cell types, because I think those are gonna form the kind of building blocks of our discussions about cancer and and other things today. Our immune system permeates almost every aspect of our health and disease. It is a system, really, in the sense of it it's involved in every part of our body that has evolved to protect us.

L largely to protect us against infections, viruses, bacteria, fungus. All sorts of foreign invasions and our immune system has developed a balance. is I when it's working properly, doesn't recognize the cells that are supposed to be in the body, but is finely tuned to recognize signs of things that shouldn't be in the body and to eliminate them. I mean at at its core, that's that's the the basic job of the immune system. To recognize us versus non-us. Exactly.

And you you talked about the innate versus the adaptive immune system. Largely what we're talking about are white blood cells. We're t we're talking about different types of white blood cells that are either inside of tissues or circulating in our bloodstream that go around and play coordinated and specialized roles. in sensing when something comes in that is not us, it that's foreign, that shouldn't be there.

The innate immune system does it as is sort of thought of as the the first alarm system that something something's wrong. And with the innate immune system, which consists of s cells like dendritic cells, macrophages. These are cells that are going around and they're looking for patterns of things that just generally aren't in human cells. Some signs of damage, some signs of things that are just that shouldn't be there in a in a generic way in a healthy human.

When those first alarm systems get trick triggered, all of a sudden these innate immune systems start releasing things, they change their state, and they send off an alarm to other cells in the immune system. Then they often recruit in the second arm of the immune system that you mentioned, the adaptive immune system.

We'll talk a lot about the adaptive immune system today. W and the major players in the adaptive immune system are a group of white blood cells that are collectively known as lymphocytes. But we'll talk about B cells and T cells in particular, which are major groups of lymphocytes. We've been focused heavily on T cells. T cells play a central role in coordinating the the fine tuning of the immune response. One of the amazing things about the T cells is that each T cell naturally in our body

It's one of the few places where each cell will actually have a different piece of DNA that's not inherited in in our germline sequence. Each T cell will make its own receptor that is generated largely at random. To go and sense something. And those sensors that get put on the surface of T cells are there to engage. And if they're engaged, it's a sign that something has has been recognized as foreign. And so we have this incredible diversity.

of of different T cell receptors that h are have developed on our T cells, each one will have a different unique receptor on its surface. Each cell will have a different receptor on its surface. And the the way to think about these receptors is that they're sensors. for their when they're engaged they send a signal to the T cell that okay, y we found something that that you've been programmed to recognize and program is recognize as far in if it's if the immune system is working properly.

And are the genes uh that these T cells make as these receptors Uh are those based on experience of the of the organism? Because you said that it doesn't come from the germline. But we should clarify that the germline is not about infectious germs in this context. The germline uh DNA is from

the sperm and egg that were your parents. Yeah. It became you. There's recombination of those genes and then there's you, all, um, each and all. Um and the T cells are making genes that neither your parents necessarily expressed nor that You were expected to express except based on what? Exposure to particular pathogens? Like why do they make certain receptors and not others? Largely random.

Uh th it actually there's the pieces of DNA at at this part of the the DNA actually recombine and get pasted together in In unique ways. So it's probabilistic. It's probabilistic. And that's what allows us to have cells that lying there and waiting for things that we've never encountered. If a a a bacteria might come into existence or virus might come into existence that doesn't even exist now in nature, but we might have T cells lying there waiting that could be engaged by those

proteins on the surface that viruses would introduce. Aaron Powell That's incredible. Would you mind mentioning the the role of the thymus? These days I'm hearing more and more about we have a thymus, then we lose a thymus. Would it be beneficial if we could keep our thymus around? Aaron Ross Powell

Thymus, T Cell Selection; B Cells & Antibodies

Is uh is actually the reason the T cells are called T cells is the T stands for thymus. And the thymus is an organ that it does sort of shrink as we age, but at least in childhood, it's it sort of lies by your heart.

Mm-hmm and it is the place where T cells go and a key place of their education. So they they've have are making these sensors at s largely at random. And in in the thymus they get cold. They get selected and they the ones that by accident are generated that recognize something that is supposed to be in your body.

if the if the if the T cell engages a natural target in the thymus, those cells will die. And so what emerges from the thymus should be, and this is not perfect process, but should be things that have are Have emerged at random but then are selected to remove things that recognize your own body target.

There's sort of a negative selection of the stuff that's you so that your immune system doesn't attack you and it knows you from non you. Yeah, that's exactly right. There's actually both a positive selection and a negative selection. That's exactly the right way to think of it. The cells get Will only emerge from the thymus that if they have a s a a a receptor on their surface that's there, so the the that's a once positive selection.

But if it engages with a self-target in the thymus, it gets negatively selected. So what comes out are T cells that are there with sensors in place. To recognize things that shouldn't be there. Okay. So your thymus and your T cells get educated in childhood. Yeah. And that's what you're working with. Except that the immune system can adapt and make it a little bit.

antibodies to things it doesn't recognize. Aaron Powell The antibodies come from the from the other type of lymphocells. So now now we can talk About the B cells. B cells are this uh other type of lymphocyte that work in coordination with T cells. And they're the antibody producing cells. So they actually have a similar process where they're generating different antibodies at random through a similar kind of recombination event. They have their own form of selection that they go through.

And then those antibodies can then be released into the bloodstream and and are the basis for protection against infections after we get them.

Sponsors: BetterHelp & Helix Sleep

I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge our sponsor, BetterHelp. BetterHelp offers professional therapy with a licensed therapist carried out entirely online. Now I've been doing therapy for a very long time, and I can tell you that it's a lot like physical workouts. There are days when I want to do it, and there are days when I don't want to do it. But when I finish a therapy session, every single time I come away feeling better and knowing that the time was well spent.

And typically when I finish a therapy session, I come away with a valuable insight or some new perspective on something that I've been working through, whether or not That's with work, with relationships, my personal life, or simply my relationship with myself. There's just so much benefit that comes through effective therapy. And that's not just my personal experience. There are loads and loads of clinical studies to support that.

With BetterHelp, they make it very easy to find an expert therapist who can help provide the benefits that come through effective therapy. They have a short questionnaire to help match you to the ideal therapist for you. And while BetterHelp has an industry-leading match rate, if you aren't happy with your match, you can switch to a different therapist anytime. Also, because BetterHelp is done entirely online, it's extremely time efficient. You simply log on and have your session.

If you would like to try BetterHelp, go to betterhelp.com slash Huberman to get 10% off your first month. Again, that's betterhelp.com slash huberman. Today's episode is also brought to us by Helix Sleep. Helix Sleep makes mattresses and pillows that are customized to your unique sleep needs.

Now I've spoken many times before on this and on other podcasts about the fact that getting a great night's sleep is the foundation of mental health, physical health, and performance. When we aren't getting great sleep on a consistent basis, Everything suffers, and when we are sleeping well and enough, our mental health, physical health, and performance in all endeavors improve markedly. Now the mattress you sleep on makes a huge difference in the quality of sleep that you get each night.

How soft it is or how firm it is all play into your comfort and need to be tailored to your unique sleep need. If you go to the Helix website, you can take a brief two-minute quiz and it will ask you questions such as, do you sleep on your back, your side, or your stomach? Maybe you know, maybe you don't.

Do you tend to run hot or cold during the night? Things of that sort. You answer those questions, and Helix will match you to the ideal mattress for you. For me, that turned out to be the Dusk D U S K mattress. I've been sleeping on a dusk mattress for more than four years now, and it's been far and away the best sleep that I've ever had.

If you'd like to try Helix, you can go to helixsleep.com slash huberman, take that two-minute sleep quiz, and Helix will match you to a mattress that's customized for you. Right now, Helix is giving up to 27% off their entire site. Helix has also teamed up with True Med, which allows you to use your HSA FSA dollars to shop Helix's award-winning mattresses. Again, that's helixsleep.com slash Huberman to get up to 27% off.

Immune System Health, Sleep, Diet; Genes

What um underlies the sort of efficiency and functioning of the immune system. I I know I and many people are thinking Okay, we hear like our immune system gets activated or our uh our immune system is impaired. Um the one thing that I'm certain uh supports the immune system is Great sleep. Right? We just know this. If we don't sleep well or enough, we get sick. Is that because there's a a a known impairment of the immune system?

I I wonder about this too. I mean, I agree. Anecdotally, I've experienced that so many times of being run down and then being being feel experiencing that I'm susceptible to infection. But I I don't actually know the basis of that. I mean th it's kind of amazing how much we don't know about these determinants of of immune health.

Largely because there are often variables that are left out of the the mouse studies w that we're doing. We're you know, we're studying largely steady state uh uh uh uh uh uh immune responses in mice and w I I would say we don't haven't done a full exploration yet of all the types of ways that general health Impinges on the immune system. I had a uh someone in my lab, a a postdoc named Sagar Bhupat, who came to my lab with an interest in in

in metabolic health and wanted to study the effect of metabolic health on on T cells. And this th there's some subgrowing stuff on this. But it's another like what what are the determinants of it? He did an e he did experiments in my lab where he Exposed. Some an allergen, something that irritated the skin and caused an allergic type reaction in in the skin of mice. He did it in mice that were eating a normal mouse diet versus a high high fat diet that caused obesity.

And what we saw was that it was actually n not just Qualit uh quantitative difference in the immune system, but actually a qualitative difference. The actual type of inflammation, the cell responses were different in in the mice eating a high fat diet. And I think we haven't done enough studies like that where we actually start playing with the variables of life and test them in in a mechanistic way to isolate individual variants. What was interesting there was that

The allergic reaction actually looked totally different in the obese mice. And if we used surrogates that are for the types of drugs that are being used now to treat s severe allergy, so we gave antibodies that block allergic responses. The normal flip diet mice would respond favorably to these. It it they didn't help the the mice that w had the obese high fat diet respon response to inflammation. And in some cases it actually maybe made it worse.

So so I think that there are these these systemic ways, I mean clearly we know we our intuition tells us this strongly, that systemic health can can feed into our immune responses. But I think it's still been underexplored in rigorous ways. I realize I'm asking very top contour type questions for which there probably aren't specific answers, but uh we all know people that um get sick all the time.

Um and we know people who never seem to catch the bugs that everyone else seems to catch. Is there any understanding of what a more robust immune system is at the level is it more T cells? Is it um but You know, are the the B cells engaged more quickly so they can generate antibodies more quickly? Uh what is it? These are great questions. I I that I don't think have full full answers.

Aaron Powell, Jr.: There are. There's been a lot of work on g genetic determinants and and there's extreme cases where people have a genetic gap in their immune system where they're really r susceptible to something that healthy people should not be susceptible to. And you see that there are certain types of infections that either happen or happen with a a different type of severity in people with genetic

in cer in certain branches of their immune system. And and in some cases you can pinpoint that we just talked about the innate immune response, the adaptive immune response. You can see that certain genetic mutations that people inherit could influence one or multiple branches of that immune responses and the consequences that you that manifests itself with different types of infection.

And I suspect that there's some spectrum of that th y we see the the really you can diagnose the really strong genetic consequences and then there might be a long tail of more subtle genetic that might be multi multi genetic that we don't fully understand. And then I'm sure that there's other determinants of health that are just multifactorial. And it's always it you know, it it also becomes this interplay between the health and then what you get exposed to by by your environment.

Childhood Exposure & Allergy Prevention; Autoimmune Reactions

Yeah, speaking of which, uh I'm familiar with some studies from Stanford, I believe, where um kids that have no exposure to peanuts get peanut allergies and um careful, subtle increasing exposure to peanuts essentially um protects them against peanut allergies. So is it true that when we're young, that exposure to pathogens, um, and different foods uh gives us a more robust immune system. I think that there's that what we're exposed to and what we develop tolerance for.

is is critically important during there's some windows of early life. that I think are we're particularly susceptible to becoming tolerant. And I think if we don't get the proper exposure to certain things, all of a sudden our our body can start to be hypersensitive to them, which manifests as allergies.

Now there's this balancing act. I think the fear of allergies makes people more more hesitant to expose kids. And I think you can it can get into these these dangerous zones of you don't want to expose kids who are gonna have a di of a a dangerous allergic response. But on the other hand, critical early exposure is part of how tolerance is maintained. And I th I think peanut allergies, there there is strong evidence that exposure to peanuts can be beneficial.

Be in people who are not yet allergic. What's going on w with autoimmune conditions? Yeah. Is this that the the B cells and T cells are at a probabilistic level? The T cells developed um some reaction, so to speak, a a binding to um cells that we naturally make that they shouldn't have. It was just like It happens. Yeah. I've always been intrigued by by the idea that when the immune system is really ramped up um people will experience autoimmune like symptoms. I

ha experienced that as a masters student. I I was working so much and probably not eating enough and drinking so much caffeine back then.

that I got some kind of funky skin lesion things. I went to the doctor and I'm like, oh you're starting to get some uh attack of the deeper layers of of your skin. Um you just need to work a little less and sure enough, did that and that did the trick? It did the trick. Uh you know, but I I was just It made me so keenly aware of how um The immune system will, for lack of a better word, adapt to conditions and it was trying to keep me healthy and it it overshot the mark, basically.

at a first principle like how things are supposed to work. I told you, okay, there's this process of generating receptors on the surface of T cells, antibodies get generated on B cells, that they go through this positive n selection and negative selection.

That's a delicate balancing act and it doesn't actually work that way in practice. In in practice, T cells escape from the thymus that d do recognize our own self antigens. And there's actually secondary mechanisms that to block that, but Autoimmune diseases emerge. when those normal checks fail. This and I think it's a consequence that the immune system has two major responsibilities. It has to be prime to protect us from infections, which would be fatal.

and be strong and recognize this incredible diversity of potential th foreign dangerous things that we might experience. But it also has to not recognize our own cells. And it can miss the mark in both ways. And so autoimmune disease it manifests in different tissues if if you if your immune system starts recognizing targets. in your joints, it can cause rheumatoid arthritis. If it's in those cells that produce insulin in the pancreas, it causes type one or childhood diabetes.

Um, if it's the myelin myelinated cells in the brain, it's multiple sclerosis. So this is autoimmunity and inflammation of different kinds. cause their own pathology. So we wanna the immune system is always these sort of two sides of the coin, making sure that we're s having strong responses to infection.

We'll talk about cancer, where we wanna also strengthen our responses. But for autoimmunity, inflammation, allergies, we wanna make sure that like our goal therapeutically and with drugs is to make sure that we make the immune system under control.

And ideally do it in a targeted way so that you don't have to turn off the whole immune system w with blanket immunosuppression, but to do it in a way that just makes you tolerant or not reactive against the things that are being inappropriately d targeted by the immune system.

Whole Body Immune Response, Cytokines & Fever; Antibiotics

Two things that I'd love to understand about the immune system is uh how is it that um an immune response, let's say to a cold virus, is systemic? Like the like Where is the sort of master uh uh controller is it or maybe it's a distributed system that says like, okay, we need to launch a a body wide response as opposed to a localized response. I can I can imagine like with a splinter of course, you're gonna get a localized response.

It's a little piece of wood or metal. And so you're gonna get the innate response and you're gonna get some pus around it and it'll kinda localize the wound. When it comes to an invasive virus like the cold virus, uh it overtakes us, right? The production of mucus, we got the headache, like the and I think it's the systemic effect That um that intrigues me so much. Like uh where is the signal to to to launch a systemic versus a localized response?

in the immune system. How does it determine that? You know, I think some of it depends on on what virus we're talking about, w how systemically invasive the the different viruses can be. And some of it can be that the immune system has different levels of, you know, it can have a local response. But the immune system the cells that we talked about in the immune system, one of their jobs can actually be to secrete things into the bloodstream.

things that what are essentially chemical signals that something is wrong. Major ones are c they're called cytokines. And they can act locally but they can also have more distributed effects. And some of the things that that the cytokines can do can influence w can cause the development of fever.

Right. So you you can have these sort of cascading effects of something being recognized at a particular side of the b body, then sending distributed signals to the blood that will make us feel sick. And you know, in some cases there's again this balancing act of S maybe the fever gives us some edge in fighting sorts some some types of infection, but it also makes us feel lousy. And so the you know, the the the immune system is is always walking.

the immune system immune system response to infections is too strong and a lot of the the negative consequence of what we experience is the immune system going too far and having to come back as as the as the as an infection gets under control. Thank you. One of the reasons I asked that is well, I hate being sick. Uh fortunately I don't get sick too often if I take good care.

Which I think is like most people. I think about antibiotics, for instance. Antibiotics are amazing. Yeah. I've had a few things where I was like, oh, this thing's bothering me and uh like I had this sinus infection a few years back and I was like, oh this is definitely not a cold and then they tell you it's not a sinus infection unless I was like, I have a feeling, no, I'm not a physician, of course, but um it got really bad.

And I took antibiotics and within a day I was feeling substantially better.

That's great. Many people have such experiences with antibiotics. I realize they can be over prescribed and you can end up with antibiotic resistant infections. That's a concern for sure. But What is the sort of inherent danger of using things like antibiotics the way I described, like not in a in a life or death situation, to mitigate the duration or or the intensity of some sort of infection, because surely you're short circuiting your immune systems

ability to eventually just fight that thing off. Like is part of building a robust immune system across your lifespan Great. Okay. Fantastic. Love that answer. Love that answer. I think you probably were exposed and had an immune response.

Antibiotics when they're used for bacterial infections that they're that are susceptible to them are a miracle. And you know, we live in this amazing sliver of human history where we have antibiotics that can cure disease. I mean I think many of us have had a lot of people. Bacterial inf infections of different kinds, cuts and wounds that would have been deadly in other generations and we're we're we're the beneficiaries of having antibiotics that work.

We are at some risk of that if we overuse them that window of human history might come to an end if we don't continue to replenish new antibiotics.

But we gain more and more bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics. Aaron Powell Are people developing new antibiotics? It's an underfunded area of medicine. Aaron Powell Because I just hear amoxicillin, penicillin. I have a friend over in the UK who's been having some some eye symptoms that Um from what I'm learning, we're still learning it's likely an infection uh in a

near the posterior chamber, which just simply means his vision is potentially at risk. Systemic antibiotics are very likely going to save his vision. And so people say, well antibiotics are bad. A hundred years ago, we probably would have just they would have just nucleated the eye. So it's I think they're a spectacularly good tool, but it seems like there's just a kit of maybe what a a

five to a dozen very commonly prescribed ones. Why aren't people developing better newer new generation antibiotics? Seems like it'd be a if for no other reason, a trillion dollar industry but also save a lot of lives. I don't know whether there's a business reason for that or it's a but it is an underfunded area. Like it's it's not where medicine has has turned enough attention and I I do think it's a genuine risk.

All right. Well some entrepreneurial young uh guy or gal or both will will launch into it. Um

Cancer; Mutations & Cell Regulation; Smoking, BRCA Mutations, Sunlight

I want to understand the relationship between the immune system and cancer. Yeah. But perhaps first we should talk about cancer, what it is and what it isn't. I think there's a lot of misunderstanding out there that cancer did not exist. in uh our not so distant past. I mean you hear this. Like people say, Oh, you know, cancer is a new thing because of the advent of, you know, all these devices with EMFs and radiation or that's certainly not what I believe.

Has cancer been around a very, very long time? Do we have evidence for that? Yeah. Yeah. I mean if anyone's really interested, I I would highly recommend the this book, uh, The Emperor of All Maladies, which is a uh which is really a biography of cancer as a disease and talk about, I mean, the long history of going back as far as there's records of tumors of various kinds and and the misery associated with it.

We have a very different understanding of of cancer right now, right? And I think cancer is one of the most sophisticated where we have one of the most sophisticated genetic understandings of disease. Doesn't mean we can always do things about it, but now we can understand mutations that accumulate in t in cells and all of a sudden so The DNA inside of a healthy cell is there programming. So if you have a skin cell, your DNA is programming your skin cell to be a sk a skin cell.

In cancer, all of a sudden s some combination of mutations emerge in that cell. getting the proper signals from its DNA to stay in the right place and it goes and switches into a mode where it's dividing out of control. And the result is that those cells will then transform into cancer cells. They'll start dividing, they'll lose the normal architecture.

the risk is that they can disrupt things in in the in the tissue where they are, or that further mutations can accumulate and they can actually start spreading into distant sites in the body, and that's metastasis. When you when you're when a cancer goes from one local site to another part of the body. And as that happens, it the those cancerous cells It's it's really an evolutionary process where those cancerous cells have acquired new genetics.

that are focused on their well being. Those cells are dividing, they're growing out of control and they're taking the resources, they're d they're they're growing at the expense of the normal coordination of the human body. And and that's that's really at at its core what what cancer is. It's genetic disease where cells lose the normal pro pro uh regulation and are dividing out of control in various tissues.

I can see the picture in my mind where a otherwise healthy cell gets a mutation. We can talk about how mutations arise, but and then starts uh spitting off daughter cells as it's referred to. Yep. Why would the daughter cells inherit the mutation necessarily to then create more cells? Because that's the prolif proliferation of the tumor. Yeah. Certainly cells propagate their DNA into their daughter cells. But um I could imagine a situation where

Every day some of our cells get a mutation, spit off a couple daughters, and then those daughter cells are are terminal, as we say, right? And they don't create more cells. Is that happening all over the body every day? So does this so how is it that a the DNA that creates the further propagation gets passed from one one cell to the next. I do think this is happening constantly. It's a process that every time A cell is around, especially as it's dividing.

There is some imperfection in how the DNA the DNA has inside each of our cells, if that cell is gonna replicate, the DNA has to replicate itself. So you end up with two copies of DNA, what that should be the same, each one being passed on to the two daughter cells of that dividing cell.

That process of DNA replication is imperfect. And if there's any kind of damage during that process, one of those two copies might end up different than the other one, in which case you end up with a mutation now in one daughter cell and not the other.

Dileterious or if it's damaging, which probably most mutations are, those cells might start to die off. Okay, did something got the DNA got messed up, those cells that are carrying that DNA die. Yeah, they can't take up glucose, they can't we they just can't do cell stuff. And there's a lot of control mechanisms in the cell that says something something's wrong, let's send a d a

program cell death signal to that cell and cells will kind of implode with with various processes when something's wrong. And that's that happens m most of the time. The problem is if if if that change all of a sudden starts to not be damaging, but to actually be a signal, okay, now the cell is is growing more. it has some benefit that it's accumulated as a result of that mutation. Now that cell will start to divide more

And the that cell that's carrying that first mutation might start dividing more. It both of its daughters now will pass on this this mutation that's made it divide more. And if in subsequent rounds it gets a second hit. It w that y the combination may go from just cells that are dividing a little bit more to cells that take off and become full blown cancer. Now there's certain processes that will accelerate that.

exposure to things that cause DNA damage, right? The major one is is smoking. The the lung cells get exposed to these chemicals. that then cause higher amounts of DNA damage, more mutations. And just as you have more mutations at a higher frequency, you're more likely to accumulate the set a set of mutations that will gradually go on to cause the generation of cancer. Another way that is that this process can be accelerated is that some people carry

an underlying genetic predisposition to cancer. So people you m will likely have heard of the BROCA or the BRCA genes which predispose to breast cancer and other types of cancer. There people start with one copy that's already setting them on a road to h higher risk of mutations accumulating and the whole process on unc happens with a higher frequency. And so this it this

march towards cancer cells is more likely to occur in people with that type of predisposition. How common is the BRACA mutation? Uh is it equally distributed in men and women? Um Yeah, what can you tell us? And should everyone get tested for BRACA and there's a lot of questions here. I'll ask them again one by one. Um and then of course we'll talk about things that could be protective, not just

But certainly avoiding smoking uh would be uh paramount. So how common is breath? Yeah, so in terms of m mu mu mutagens, like the big ones are smoking. Sun exposure for melanoma. I know you know, th I know the balancing features of sun exposure but but Clearly UV is is a risk factor for sk uh m m DNA damage in the skin. I mean I'm uh perfectly happy going on record. My the things I've said around sunlight have been contorted so many different ways. It's like a pretzel twist now.

No, it's more like one of those balloon animals at a party, but it's not it's a mess. Too much UV is bad for for skin cells. It's just bad. You need some, but too much is bad. Long wavelength light is great. Uh for and therein lies the challenge. Yeah. But yeah, love sunlight, but you don't want excessive UV. Don't get

Uh avoid getting sunburned, folks. Yeah. Thank you. So yeah, the BRCA mutation, I I have a personal relationship to this because I lost both my graduate advisor and my postdoctoral advisor to

BRAC Mutations, Mutagens, Pesticides

BRACO mutation related cancers, ver fifty and six you know, just a little bit older than sixty in the other, and you know, brutal. Um, especially when you You know, one of them I know they're kids and you know, it's um uh just for young people getting cancer and I know they're childhood cancers, but BRACA seems pretty common. I don't know the numbers off the top of my head. I mean I they're not the major like numerical causes of of k of cancer.

in the scheme of cancers that developed it's it's a it's a it's a it's a minority. It's a relatively small set number of the full set of cancers. The problem is if you inherit a BRAC a mutation as an individual, you have a very high risk of developing cancer. So it as an individual your risk goes way, way up and of certain types of cancer in particular.

And we can all get tested for it now pretty cheaply, right? Yes. Yeah. Yeah. That's certainly recommended if there's a family history of of cancer for braca mutations and a a c a couple of other ones. But you're right. It's the tests are available. And you asked about men v and women. Mm-hmm. It actually was was Men were s were some of the ways that those BRCO genes were identified. Because it's so rare for men to develop breast cancer.

the ones who did develop it, there was a thought, well, maybe there's an underlying genetic predisposition and that helped identify those genes. Interesting. Um, everyone get tested for Braca if you you know, because there are lifestyle factors that can reduce your cancer risk. I'd like to talk about mutagens. Yeah. Um smoking, bad.

I'll go on record saying vaping bad, perhaps not as bad as smoking, but still way, way worse than not vaping. Uh the battle to sort of protect vaping is is like beyond me, but um Okay, uh to each their own. Um Environmental uh sort of and workplace hazards, you know, like known mutagens. If you work in a laboratory, you're working with mutagens. Right? Yeah. There's always worried me working in a laboratory. There are a lot of carcinogenic

Chemicals in a laboratory. For good reason, yeah. Right. Chemicals, radiation. Uh yeah. I don't know if you about you. I did a lot of lot of experiments radio labeling cells. Yeah. I mean we well, fortunately we worked with uh you know radio tagged amino acids with radiation that was we were told and I do believe was not not as as dangerous as some of the others, but

Yeah, I mean the c so chemical exposures are a big one. Yep. And so those those labels on paints and thinners and uh stuff in the garage, that's real. That's a that's a real thing. Those they mutate cells. And there's a you know, there's some spectrum of stronger and less strong ones. And I think oftentimes we're operating in an an absence of great data, but I you know I think there's

A lot of things are implicated as potential mutagens. Pesticides. Yeah. You look at cancer rates in in um rural areas near where, you know, crops are dusted with pesticides and We've had uh Shauna Swan came on here and she's like, listen, you know, the the cancer risks, the uh you know, endocrine disruptor risks, we think of as like big cities as b as dirty and dangerous and they are for certain reasons, but she said if you really see the spikes in uh

in these cancers uh related to environmental factors. less so bus exhaust than it is pesticides. I mean it it is not evenly or fairly distributed. So people get exposed way more to these things. And we haven't studied them enough. We n we need way more study to really be able to answer okay, the and and and people shouldn't be left I mean this is my this is me just speaking as an

It's kind of amazing to me how much we're left on our own to be figuring out what the risk of individual products is. And I d I think it's a place where we should be investing a lot more to get clarity on where the real risks are.

Sponsor: AG1

As many of you know, I've been taking AG1 for nearly 15 years now. I discovered it way back in 2012, long before I ever had a podcast, and I've been taking it every day since. The reason I started taking it, and the reason I still take it, is because AG1 is, to my knowledge, the highest quality and most comprehensive of the foundational nutritional supplements on the market.

It combines vitamins, minerals, prebiotics, probiotics, and adaptogens into a single scoop that's easy to drink and it tastes great. It's designed to support things like gut health, immune health, and overall energy. And it does so by helping to fill any gaps you might have in your daily nutrition. Now of course everyone should strive to eat nutritious whole foods. I certainly do that every day.

But I'm often asked if you could take just one supplement, what would that supplement be? And my answer is always AG1, because it has just been oh so critical to supporting all aspects of my physical health, mental health, and performance. I know this from my own experience with AG1, and I continually hear this from other people who use AG1 daily. If you would like to try AG1, you can go to drinkag1.com slash Huberman to get a special offer.

For a limited time, AG one is giving away six free travel packs of AG one and a bottle of vitamin D three K two with your subscription. Again, that's drink AG one with the numeral one dot com slash Huberman. to get six free travel packs and a bottle of vitamin D3K2 with your subscription.

X-Rays & Airport Scanners, Carcinogen vs Mutagen, Charred Meat, Food Dye

I get x rays at the dentist now and again. But I prefer not to get them. X rays cause mutations. Yeah. Again, uh there's a trade off and the dose and sure. I you know, when you need an x ray you need an x ray. But I wouldn't do them for fun. Right. Um I mean I have

colleagues who prefer to do the slower um manual uh pat down at the airport um to going through the scanner. It's a low level of radiation is what they tell me. But if you're traveling a lot You're getting multiple low level exposures.

And we know pilots, and this is for other reasons because they're you know, uh you can tell us, but atmospherically they're exposed to more radiation. Cancer rates are higher in pilots. Now they're sitting a lot too, prostate kids, okay, there's a bunch of things there, but um do you yourself Avoid the scanner at the airport. Honestly, I I do, but I can't say that there's data for that. I I feel the same way as you. Like if I could avoid it, I I'd try to minimize.

But I that's not based on some inside knowledge I have, but I have the same bias of less seems better. Yeah. I mean w I'm not out to get the the scanner industry. I just I think it's useful for people to hear that, that you could that one can have no formal data but an understanding of mechanism that leads them to to hedge. Yeah. It's good to know. Are there any um mutagens and

Well is a carcinogen and a mutagen the same thing? Aaron Powell So they're they're closely related. Mutagen, I think, means that you're mutating, that you're changing the DNA. Those mutations may or may not be linked to to cancer, but by virtue of the fact that you're causing more mutations, almost inevitably you're also increasing the risk of cancer and carcinogens are things that increase the risk rate of cancer. I love barbecued meat.

I don't like barbecue sauce'cause it's sweet, but I li I like a meat with a char. Yeah. Yeah. Is the char bad? I think so. I mean I like it too, but yeah. Yeah, I again these are balancing decisions in life. Sure. But yes, there there there's there's some s there is

I mean meat in general has been implicated as a potential carcinogen, especially even colorectal cancer. There's some data around that. Mm-hmm. Yeah, my read of those data, not the char data, but the the meat data is it's tricky. Um From my this is just my standpoint, I wanna make sure I'm I put you know brackets around this that this is my under read of the literature is that many of the studies that looked at

meat rich red meat rich diets versus uh plant based diets. The the problem is a lot times the red meat enriched diets had a bunch of other things in them. Like sourcing wasn't considered. There was also a lot of um starches. Like is it'cause nowadays you find people who seem to at least feel better. Who knows about the longevity aspect, but feel better eating red meat, fruits and vegetables, uh limited amounts of starches versus so I feel like the nutrition studies are a mess.

They're kind of a disaster. I certainly don't have clarity on this. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And they and it seems like it changes the the the the direction. I think some things we have pretty good common sense intuition about fiber. Yeah. Ul ultra processed foods are pr probably bad. But I I I think The balance of exactly what whole foods we're eating probably still needs to be worked out. Aaron Powell How do you think about the data um on like for instance food dyes?

This is very timely. Yeah. Um where a certain food dye at a very, very, very high concentration in laboratory animals creates a significantly higher incidence of of tumors and cancers in those animals. But then the amount of food dye that's in the human food is is is a tiny fraction of that. Um I'm not trying to get political here. I just think as a framework for people to think about

There are many carcinogens, I'm sure, right in this environment. I don't doubt that the lacquer on this table, in fact if that's even what they used, um uh if ingested could cause um could cause Cancer. I don't d I don't doubt that, right? But I don't know that in its in its form here, being near it.

uh for many hours a day does that. I I doubt it. We're not inhaling the table. Aaron Powell This is what I mean by this this c this this level of confusion. I think we all live with this background confusion of The thing some study has been published in in mice at whole high concentrations exposure doesn't mean anything in our lives. What's the relative risk?

So that's why I I start with smoking, sunlight, and then say there's a tail and I I don't think we know fully what that distribution is yet. I'm sure there are some combination of things that are increasing our risk of cancer. We don't really know how to weigh Uh duration and amount of exposure. And this is why I think it's really scary to people. People don't know

You know, they they know smokers who don't get lung cancer. Yeah. And non smokers who do. And non smokers who do. And so I think people go, Well, like what they it actually has caused I I believe a lot of um damage in the faith in in medicine. unfortunately because the messaging is all uh is mixed up.

Yeah, I think that nowadays people are trying to do what they can to protect themselves. Yeah. But people still get cancer. P you can do everything right and still get cancer. Is that even if you don't have a BRCA mutation? Absolutely. I mean absolutely. You know, I I think

The the last thing you ever want to do is like attribute someone's actions to to cancer. I mean it it is it is a probabilistic disease where some set of mutations occur that cause a really devastating disease. And so I Yeah, I mean I we don't know the answers and I think we have to be humble about that.

Immune-Based Cancer Treatment, Checkpoint Inhibitors, CAR T-Cell Therapy

Now what I I think we can also talk about is well uh how how do we handle how do we treat cancer when it comes up? And this is where these two conversations that we've been having really come together of been talking about the immune system. We went through a lot of I think I mean actually we went through a lot of sort of detailed mechanism thinking about the different cell constituents of our immune system.

I will tell you that when I went to medical school, which wasn't that long ago, I graduated in two thousand ten. The dogma was don't waste time thinking about cancer immunology. Cancer immunology is a field that's going nowhere.

I mean I think uh I w I I was in Boston, I think that was a maybe there was some local bias in that direction, but this was not the mainstream of thinking about how we would treat cancer. At that point the the way the cancer was being treated was Chemotherapy, which you know is something that's been around for decades, and it's basically give toxins to the body that will be s more toxic to the cancer cells than to the healthy cells, and p ask people to endure all the side effects.

Because they have to to get rid of the cancer cells and that's still the mainstay of of of cancer treatment. We all want to do better than that. It's very unpleasant. Very, very unpleasant. Unpleasant and and worse. I mean I mean people endure hor you know, it's it's we put put we put people through horrific things because it's the best we can do. And then there was a wave of thinking, okay, well Let's try to make drugs that are targeted to the mutations that we talked about.

And that was that was the hot thing. That was pr the promising avenue when I was in medical school of like, okay, now we n we've really measured th these are mutations that accumulate inside of cancer cells. This is what's causing cancer. Let's let's make drugs that go after those things and Turned out that that was Although a lot of good has come from that. Cancer has a way of working around that. So these are cell cycle inhibitors?

S uh uh signaling thing, various mutations affect this these growth properties of of cells, and there's targeted drugs that have been designed to go after some of those pathways that are making the cells divide out of control. Yeah.

I think that benefit has come, but cancer has ways of mutating around that and cu become developing resistance. The same way we talked about resistance in bacteria to antibiotics if they're exposed you could cancer cells are can evolve quickly and can become resistant to these targeted modifications. What has emerged as a whole new way of thinking about going after cancer is using the power of the immune system that we talked about at the beginning and redirecting that against cancer targets.

This has changed how we think about cancer treatment. It's the hope is that all of we talk we j we talk to all of us have this immune system that goes through every organ in our body, it circulates. We have white blood cells that are constantly going around and looking for things that shouldn't be there. Can we unleash that immune system against cancer?

And the hope would be that the cells that our immune system we talked about, how they're really exquisitely evolved to make a determination of this is a healthy cell, this is not a healthy cell, this this cell should be here, this should not.

If we could get that level of precision where we could have a durable immune response that gets rid of the cancer cells but leaves the healthy cells intact, that is what we want. Now that is not science fiction and has co is is now approved and used to treat a number of different cancers. The first place where that where this happened was in a class of medicines called checkpoint inhibitors, um or immunotherapy drugs.

Uh a lot of a lot of people will have heard of these things. P D one, C T L A four are some targets where there are drugs that get infused that Hit these things that are on the surface of T cells. And they actually are natural breaks to the T cells.

T cells might be in our body there, but turned off or not turned on enough to be strong enough against cancer. And for certain types of cancer it's been absolutely miraculous that if you make a drug that hits the break on the on the T cells, the T cells go stronger.

And they can be unleashed against cancer just by taking the brakes off of them. What sorts of cancers has it been successful for? One of the big success cases was was Jimmy Carter, who had a melanoma, which is a skin cell, a g aggressive skin cancer that had already gone to his brain, which was thought of as a death sentence, and he got treated with checkpoint inhibitors and basically was cured.

Amazing. Um and so you know the we s you saw these tumors just shrink away and in and not just him, but in a h in a large fraction of of melanoma patients now respond to these. And so that that has changed how melanoma is treated. It's in other cancers.

to varying degrees, cause s some types of cancers can respond to this. That's taking the a drug that unleashes the T cells that are already in our body. The focus of my research then is well I j w first thing I said was we're living in this amazing moment of biology where we can em we can do things to cells in our body that with incredible precision and And we're often just limited by our imagination.

And what we can see now is that we don't actually have to just be limited to the cells that the T cells that are natural in our body that already have this random distribution of sensors. We can actually genetically make uh uh uh one of these sensors for T cells and put it into T cells. W we can put in uh put a gene that encodes something on the surface of T cells.

that will make them programmed to search and destroy for cancer cells. Now this is this is largely known as chimeric antigen receptor T cells. That's a a long term. They're known for short as CART cells, chimeric antigen receptor. And what that means, chimeric, is that these are stitched together. This is a receptor that was designed in a lab, does not exist in nature.

but can be put into a piece of DNA, delivered into a T cell. And when that DNA goes into the genetic code of the T cell, all of a sudden the T cell will start making proteins. that go on its surface and act as these artificial sensors. And those cars then when those T cells get reinfused into a patient the way that you get like a a blood transfusion.

Those cars are directed to go against cancers. This has been done for certain types of leukemia and lymphoma and there's been these amazing success stories. The thing that woke up me and the world was in two thousand twelve. there was a young girl who was the first pediatric patient to be treated with a CAR T cell. for for cancer. So sh she she's become a heroic figure. Uh Emily Whitehead. She was, I think, eight at the time, and she had a form of leukemia that

hadn't res it just was for some reason, whatever reason, it failed all the treatments and the it just nothing worked. She was gonna be sent home on hospice. She had uh exhausted all the possibilities at the age of eight. And she got enrolled in a at that time highly experimental treatment to get these CAR T cells. So her blood cells were taken out in a big blood donation. Her t own T cells were genetically modified. And we could talk about how that was done. It was actually done with like

A pretty crude technique that's been around, actually used viruses, lentiviruses. These are sort of modified HIV viruses to deliver this extra piece of DNA that encoded the car. And this was done on her cells. And then after that extra gene was put into the T cells, the T cells were reinfused into her body. And

It was not a straightforward course. She she ended up in the ICU. The immune system had to uh we people in real time people had to figure out how to control the immune systems and the side effects. But as that was controlled, all of a sudden the her cancer cells disappeared. Amazing. And the lentivirus itself didn't uh didn't spark a

an immune reaction that was that outweighed the benefits of the of the cargo. No, it ama amazingly it it really hasn't. I mean th there's there's been some discussion about the risks of using these lentiviruses. And we we'll talk in a second about how we could do better now. Yeah, people are gonna hear uh putting viruses into cells and putting them into humans and a bunch of people will freak out. But I I promise you that things like adeno, which is like a cold virus, or lenti, which is

similar to HIV. And of course they didn't give her HIV. They changed the virus, so they're not delivering HIV. These viruses are incredible because they can create long lasting expression of genes that you deliberately put into them.

They they're a shuttle. It's an amazing application of biological understanding, right? That all of a sudden we've been studying viruses because of the risk that they have. We but we've learned that they can deliver they That viruses have evolved to be very good shuttles and to deliver their genetic material into cells.

the is the viruses have evolved to take advantage of our biology and our genes. And so we did it the ultimate touche in these instances. Like you're so good at at hijacking our cells DNA and proliferating. All right. We won't leverage you to help us as opposed to hurt us, right? That's exactly right. And so that was done in 2012. Emily Whitehead was eight.

CRISPR, Immunotherapies

It was d done as an experimental treatment at the University of Pennsylvania and the story

now is that now all these years later, Emily White has not only cured of her leukemia, she's pre med at the University of Pennsylvania. So so awesome. And so no one could ignore that. You know, this was this wasn't this was just All of a sudden, uh, this dogma that I had just been taught a couple of years early in medical school that we should ignore the the cancer immunotherapy, it was just we were just wrong.

Mm-hmm. And all of a sudden the field woke up and said, Okay, the immune system is not just limited to treating v viruses and bacter or protecting us from viri viruses and bacteria. The immune system can be exploited and potentially re-engineered to protect us from cancer and maybe other diseases. So that was 2012. 2012 also was the year that a paper got published in science by Emmanuel Charpentier and Jennifer Dowdner that introduced this new technology called CRISPR.

And we can t we we'll talk about this. But CRISPR fundamentally is a tool to rewrite DNA sequences. That came out in 2012. On a personal level, two thousand twelve was also the year that I moved to San Francisco. to start a lab studying T cells and how genetics influences T cells. I was looking around and trying to figure out what my lab would do and all of a sudden I was arriving with a empty lab space at exactly the same moment that that The world was shown that T cells could cure cancer.

And that we had a tool that could potentially rewrite DNA sequences and that we wouldn't be limited to these lentiviruses, which are kind of clunky, the best tools we had at the time, but pretty clunky and non precise in how they insert genetic material. All of a sudden we could imagine that we w could take T cells and use CRISPR To actually pick individual places in the genome and make

targeted changes to program exactly how cells behave. And that is the basis for my ongoing work. We've put a lot of work over the years into being able to now take CRISPR technology, get it to work in T cells. to learn the rules about what are the genetic changes that will be most effective at making T cells into Into immunotherapies that cure patients for dirt with different diseases. And then to go all the way and then actually use CRISPR to make.

T cells that can be in input into patients with new levels of precision and power. And that's that's in clinical trials now. We're now in clinical trials with these CRISPR engineered car T cells and we're Not just going after leukemias, where these CAR T cells have historically worked, but uh we're also thinking about can we make these work for the really common causes of cancer deaths.

solid tumors. And that's been a challenge and we can talk about that. But getting T cells to find the right targets in tumors and then work inside of tumor environments which are inherently immunosuppressive. requires figuring out additional gene edits that are now possible with CRISPR to try to beat

the cancer at its own game. If cancer is evolving to to make itself cloaked from the immune system, now with CRISPR we can think about getting one step ahead and making T cells that are able to be resist all the tricks. that cancers throw at it to be more and that t I think we're on the brink of having precise CRISPR engineered cells that will I I hope start to melt away cancers without the side effects of chemotherapy.

Amazing. Uh just amazing. And the story of this young woman is spectacular. Um I have two questions before we talk about CRISPR technology. The first one is, is it true, I believe it is, but is it true that cancer risk goes up as we get older? And if so, why? Um

Age & Cancer Risk; CAR T-Cells, Targets & Side Effects; Ketogenic Diet

So that's the first question. And then uh the other question has to do with how But the the immunotherapy that you described, um was able to target the cancer and and not cause problems elsewhere, which is kind of the major issue of chemo and and radiation therapy. But the first question

Um again was, you know, why more um mutations as we get older? So I think there's there's a few cancers that that peak in childhood and there's tr risk as as the body's developing of certain cancer, childhood cancers and There's childhood leukemias for example, then that like when we talk about Emily Whitehead. But most cancers, as you said, exactly as you said, that there's this sort of increase and they're largely disease of later stages of life.

I think that the reason for that is remember when we talked about what causes cancer, it's this evolution where c sort cells start to accumulate mutations. Numerically a lot of the cells that have the mutations will die off. And it's just a a game that unfolds over time. And the more time you have cells dividing and sticking around in the body, they're accumulating more damage and eventually you're more likely that that damage would actually transform the cells into a cancer cell. So time.

is is is is a big factor here. Time and just accumulated damage. And the other question was, you know, how is it that the Lenti virus knows to um the lentiviral uh cargo carrying T cells uh uh uh know to attack the cancer and not something else. Aaron Powell So this is a key question for the field, right?

And I think one of the things that worked incredibly well was a brilliant choice by a group of scientists in different a few different places that converged on the target that was used in the first CAR T cell. And what the target is known as as is a protein called CD19. That's just the name of this thing that's found.

on a lot of different types of B cells. So this brings us back to this discussion. The the leukemias themselves are a dise uh a cancer of the immune cells, so they're cancer of B cells. And CD19 is a is found on the key on the surface of many uh a a large number of different types of B cell leukemias and lymphomas. I think one of the things that turns out to be serendipitous here is that B s B cells themselves, natural healthy B cells, actually also have CD19 on their surface.

What just turns out to be serendipitous is that the body can tolerate those cells going away. And so what has made this a particularly effective and so safe and relatively well tolerated treatment for cancer is that the collateral damage is actually not that damaging. That T cells in this case are not strictly distinguishing between cancer and health. They're not just getting the leukemia cells. They're they are getting collateral B cells.

But l by and large, to a first approximation, people can live without those cells. And so that side effect has just been tolerable. Finding that balance gets harder and harder for more cancers, right? If you start to think about pancreatic cancer or brain cancer, finding targets

that if you hit the hank the healthy pancreas or the healthy brain are not toxic, it's it's harder and harder. So people are thinking about more and more sophisticated ways to look for these targets that are selectively found on the cancer cell and not on the healthy cell. Or to think about ways that you might actually make the sale depend on recognizing multiple features so that you can have what's sometimes talked about as like a two-factor authentication.

The T cell will only kill cancer if it finds this and this. And th that combination of things are not found on on healthy cells, even if one or or the other might be. So people are thinking about how do we get more sophisticated about building these discrimination systems in into T cells. The building blocks are there, but the specifics for each cancer have to be invented. But but we have the tools to do that.

Awesome. Before we talk about CRISPR, there was one other question that I know many people will be thinking about. Uh a few years back, maybe five, ten years back, there was a a lot of discussion, maybe even some enthusiasm about ketogenic diets. to treat or prevent cancer. And my understanding from looking at that literature was that for some cancers, it perhaps I wanna bold uh underline and and capitalize perhaps. Um might help. But for other cancers it could make things worse.

And then uh I also more recently started hearing about uh low glutamine diets. Um and of course this is the way the internet works, but um but I did see some papers and some decent journals, you know, uh that at least we're exploring this. So our um

Let's call it what they are. Ketogenic diets, um have they been shown to be useful for treatment or avoidance of cancer? Aaron Powell I have to defer to you. I actually I don't I don't know the answer to that. Yeah. Okay. My my guess is that um people are still looking at this. But you know, there was also the idea that they could be useful for

Um certain forms of dementia. There was an effort to call dementia, you know, type 3 diabetes. But my understanding from talking to the experts in this is that. Um it might help through indirect mechanisms, but that it's not going to solve the problem. Um Okay. Well th thanks for entertaining that little uh cul-de-sac that I created.

CRISPR Discovery & Mechanism

CRISPR, tell us the story of CRISPR. Uh, because I think CRISPR is one of those funny things in biology and medicine that almost everybody has heard about. in the general population. Most people know it has something to do with changing genes, but it's sort of like AI. Yeah. It's here, uh it's powerful, it scares certain people, it excites other people, um, but most people don't know how it works because there's really no incentive to.

I think the story of CRISPR is actually also a story about uh how science works. Yeah. And that's important too. Aaron Powell I think it's exactly true. I think it is a perfect illustration of something where a discovery happened with that no one was planning but changed biology. Um One arc is the arc of understanding DNA. You know, if you go back to Watson and Crick, it's understanding the double helix to understand the structure of w the DNA what a DNA sequence is.

That matures, we've learned how to sequence to understand. the r to be able to measure a row of A Ts and Cs and Gs that in whatever combination they are will start to be the building blocks for programming which proteins get made inside a cell. And then around 2000 we get to the first draft of the human genome, which is this multi-billion dollar project across the world to come up with a draft of one human genome sequence. Milestone for for biology and medicine.

And then DNA sequencing technologies continue to improve and cost comes down. And we're getting to the point where we can start to measure. increasingly affordable costs and people were starting to understand the differences between people with DNA at the level of at least statistics. Okay. People with this disease are more likely to have this this gene than that. But

We're getting to some limit of what we can do just by m sequencing DNA. All of a sudden you're you're observing the DNA sequence that's in someone's cells, but you don't really know what those effects are. Just as the sequencing world is is maturing. We're desperately looking for a tool to say, well, now we wanna as we have all the sequences, we wanna be able to see what happens if you change the sequence.

And people were stumbling around looking for wo different tools. There were there was there was a range of these things. There were zinc fingers. There were people Lentivirus was another one that we just talked about that with different degrees of efficiency and people were trying to to be able to change DNA sequences in cells and it had been a longstanding effort. out of nowhere emerges CRISPR as the answer to this problem.

CRISPR was being studied as an an interesting and unusual set of DNA sequences that were found in certain types of bacteria. There were these repeated sequences and no one knew what they were. And people out of real basic curiosity about what was happening in bacteria started studying these repeat sequences and what they were doing. And little by little by little It was worked out that these repeat repeat sequences actually be formed the basis of a kind of immune system for bacteria.

Now we talked about the human immune system. Bacteria are just an individual cell, but they're also susceptible to infections, which is sort of a strange idea. Bacteria cause infections in us, but There's this arms race between organisms. Everyone's trying to kill everyone else. And so bacteria are constantly being bombarded by certain types of viruses. They're called bacteriophage viruses. And they've evolved a series of

Bacteria have d evolved a series of defense mechanisms to protect themselves from these viruses. CRISPR turns out to be a bacterial defense mechanism against viruses. It's kind of amazing that this that this thing that has entered into popular culture is a bacteria protection against bacteria fate. Now why has this caught the world of biology by storm?

Well what was realized was was that the way that that CRISPR works to protect against itself uh t uh um the protect bacteria from viruses, is that it can recognize particular sequences of DNA. Which are virus sequences, and dis discern would discriminate whether it's a virus sequence or its own bacterial sequence. And it actually does that. by scanning across the DNA and finding something that's recognized as a virus target uh and not a bacteria target. And when it finds it, it makes a cut.

OK Now this sounds technical obscure, but What was recognized, and this became the basis for a Nobel Prize of of with Jen Jennifer Down and Emmanuel Char Charpentier, many people around the world have contributed to this field. Um What was realized was that this could be repurposed. as a tool, if we take it out of bacteria, we could actually exploit this w this CRISPR system that had evolved to protect bacteria.

And the same rules that allowed b bacteria to scan across DNA and find a virus sequence and cut it could be used to scan across any DNA and cut at a particular sequence. That's the power of CRISPR. Now why do we care so much about being able to cut a particular sequence? If you can cut, you can also start pasting. You can cut out genes that are limiting the that are you don't you don't want to be in a cell. You can start pasting in sequences to replace mutations that cause disease.

We could start pasting in big sequences like the sequence for cars or other th types of things that will make T cells more powerful. So And this is I'm I'm focused on T cells, but this is in now in every aspect of biology. People are studying this in plants and to make crops that will be drought resistant. People are studying this in in in every organ system to understand every type of disease and to build new new types of molecular medicines.

There's one other feature of CRISPR that's that's really important in this story. It's not just that this CRISPR can cut at a specific sequence, that it's evolved to cut at virus sequence. It's the way that it cuts that it has made it really catch on in a way that none of these earlier technologies do. So CRISPR, if you think of it as a it's an enzyme that can cut DNA. And it it can cut essentially almost any sequence of DNA. So how does it decide which sequence to cut?

It does it by actually pairing with an RNA molecule. So CRISPR uh i sometimes called Cas9, which is a particular type of CRISPR system. um is a is a combination of a protein, which is a scissor, and then an RNA that sticks to it. And the RNA is what actually programs where that scissor will cut. Okay, so this and and what's so special about that is that we actually know with perfect near perfect precision.

the rules of how an RNA will recognize any DNA sequence. There's a complementarity where y you you can match up and know exactly which RNA you want to design. So you can now cut DNA sequences at will. And it's gotten to the point where now if we want to cut a piece of DNA, we order a piece of RNA off the internet.

It shows up in in in the lab in a matter of days. We mix it with Cas9 protein, and then that's going in T cells the next day, and we're able to introduce a cut into any DNA sequence. So now you go back. to the genome sequence that was came out in two thousand ten and all of a sudden you can go on the internet. Pick a place in the genome that you're interested in studying, order a piece of RNA, make your your targeted CRISPR molecule, and make a cut or a cut and a paste at that particular site.

And then in a very tangible way, read out the consequences. You're going into the source code. of DNA inside of a cell and you can when you make that change, you can say what what happens to the cell? Does it is is is it a stronger response? Is it a different response? We can test it in test tubes, we can test it in models of disease. And Then as we learn the rules, we can actually take those CRISPR-modified cells all the way and infuse them into patients.

CRISPR Precision, Risk & Benefit; CRISPR Technology Evolution

Incredible. And thank you for that incredibly clear and detailed um explanation of the CRISPR-Cas9 system. A couple of questions. How precise is the cut? Are you damaging adjacent nucleotides or can you home in exactly on the site that you want to cut? And then if the related question is if you're going to introduce a gene sequence there, um How do you ensure that there aren't downstream effects? I mean, I think th what you're getting at with both of these questions are unintended consequences.

And that's always present, right. I think th this has been a major concerted effort for the field of CRISPR of how do you get more and more precise? And it's come a long way. But nothing's perfect. Right. So I think we've done a lot um the field has done a lot of work. to test off targets. Right. If you're programming a to cut on one place on chromosome six, do you actually evidently accidentally ever cut anywhere else?

And there's a range. Sometimes some sequences are a little bit more promiscuous than others, but we've gotten quite good at getting more and more precise to say, okay, we're making d these high fidelity cuts that at at one place. There are uh still the second risks of bystander effects. Okay, you make a cut, what does the DNA get chewed back and at the neighboring part? There's been in some extreme places pieces of chromosomes actually falling off. I all these things can happen. And I think

what we're kind of at a place in a field where now we're thinking about for each disease a risk benefit of okay, there's gonna be there's always a risk for any medicine of some unintended consequences. We have to be on the lookout for them. We have to know what uh what they are. Most cells, as we said, that get a mutation

don't have a problem, they just die off. So if you have an unintended consequence, most will die. But there is always the risk of the unintended consequences. And I think as a field we have to be humble about that. That said, the the the CRISPR world is not static. And what I to what I the story I told you was like the building block of CRISPR. It's a protein scissor that can be targeted to any piece of DNA with an RNA molecule.

are appropriately w thinking, well, scissors can cause damage. Maybe that de cr that CRISPR molecule should actually be re engineered not to be a scissor, but to do other things. And now people have started engineering it to say, well, let's not make it a scissor. Let's make it a thing that just introduces a more predictable mutation at a site.

David Liu at Harvard has created these things called CRISPR base editors that doesn't introduce a double stranded break but actually changes nucleotides in a more predictable way at that site by recruiting a deaminase domain, something that will change DNA nucleotides when it's recruited to a particular place, and you use CRISPR just to recruit that enzyme that makes that mutation at a targeted place.

Other people have actually started using epigenetic enzymes. The DNA doesn't just get enacted by DNA sequences, but can actually pieces of it can be active or inactive, and this is called epigenetics, where there can be a stable program of things getting turned on or off without any change in the A's and T's and C's and G's. And now we and other y others are using CRISPR base. Epigenetic editing. It's called epi editing, where we don't make any cut in the genome, but we just Turn on or off.

And it's in a large part to think about mitigating some of these risks that might come with the scissor function. Instead, all of a sudden we're thinking about we're using the same building block of recruiting an enzyme to a particular place. in the DNA code, but using the full set of things that we might do at that DNA site to program cells in the most precise possible way.

Sponsor: LMNT

I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Element. Element is an electrolyte drink that has everything you need and nothing you don't. That means the electrolytes, sodium, magnesium, and potassium, all in the correct ratios, but no sugar. Proper hydration is critical for brain and body function. Even a slight degree of dehydration can diminish your cognitive and physical performance.

It's also important that you get adequate electrolytes. The electrolytes, sodium, magnesium, and potassium, are vital for the functioning of all cells in your body, especially your neurons or your nerve cells. Drinking element makes it very easy to ensure that you're getting adequate hydration and adequate electrolyte.

My days tend to start really fast, meaning I have to jump right into work or right into exercise. So to make sure that I'm hydrated and I have sufficient electrolytes, when I first wake up in the morning, I drink 16 to 32 ounces of water with an element packet dissolved in it. I also drink element dissolved in water during any kind of physical exercise that I'm doing, especially on hot days when I'm sweating a lot and losing water and electrolyte.

Element has a bunch of great tasting flavors. In fact I love them all. I love the watermelon, the raspberry, the citrus, and I really love the lemonade flavor. So if you'd like to try Element, you can go to drinkelement.com slash Huberman to claim a free Element sample pack with any purchase.

Again, that's drinkelement.com slash Huberman to claim a free sample pack. I'm curious about getting CRISPR into the cells of interest. Yeah. You know, the lentivirus example that you gave before, um My understanding is it involved harvesting some T cells, um, introducing the lentivirus with the

CRISPR Cell Delivery, Clinical Trials; Treating Early Cancers & Prevention

You know with the cargo that you want, putting that back into circulation, and the T cells know where to go and know what to do. Uh for a lot of cell types like neurons in the brain, uh liver cells, pancreatic cells, um I could imagine a surgery where you inject directly into those organs, but uh wouldn't it be wonderful if you could um get the cells of interest for you know without having to be so invasive. Um so what what's being done there in terms of trafficking? Um

uh CRISPR to appropriate cell types or and or organs. And then that uh sort of seeds another question that I'll hold off on about whether sh we should be banking uh cells or or uh For what's coming. First of all, I just wanna pause for this this is this is great. I love this conversation. I don't like the phrase bleeding edge, it sounds violent, but you're taking us to the cutting edge of molecular biology and medicine, and we are peering over into what's next.

Like what your children and my children and are probably our parents also will uh be able to benefit from in the next ten years, maybe sooner. Yeah, we're really talking about things that are happening now and and happening at an accelerating rate. So you asked part of what just got made me have that reaction is I think you asked one of the key questions for this field of

How is this being delivered into sales? So I I told you, let me go backwards and then I'll go forward. I told you that in 2012. I sort of was sitting there thinking about I wanted to study T cells, the genetic control of T cells. I saw the power of CAR T cells, I saw the power of CRISPR, which at that time was being only used in highly artificial immortalized cell lines that grow easily in the in the lab.

And it just wasn't clear that w there would be a way to get CRISPR to work in real T cells that you would take out of a human blood sample that are not immortalized, that can only stay in a dish for a short amount of time and still retain their function. And I put a I I sort of

triple down on this was what my lab was gonna do, if we were gonna figure out a way. And we went through a long list of different ways that we might deliver and it wasn't obvious. Actually A key collaboration early in my career was Another serendipitous run-in with I met Jennifer Dowdna through some persistence on my own. And Jennifer Dowdna and I sat down and started thinking about how could we team up to take her expertise in CRISPR biochemistry and get it to work in T cells.

And we settled on this thing that was not at the top of my list of things that would work, but ended up opening up the field. We actually purified the the CRISPR protein. So we had protein and RNA that would we c we could make in a test tube. Now we now we order it off the internet. We can mix them together and we could make these protein RNA complexes and we could suspend that in liquid. And then what we did is we actually incubated T cells from a blood sample in that liquid.

And then the question was, how do you get these protein RNA complexes into the cells? And we use this trick that's been around for a long time. No one ev as as long as it's been around. Sounds magical and no one quite understands how it works. We put the cells into a device that gives a small electrical current to the T cells. Electroporation. Oh man, I I

Well, I can just say it now'cause I don't do it anymore. Um electroprate a lot of brains of uh of i intact animals. Yeah. Yeah. You inject DNA, it's floating around in the in the local tissue, you pass some square wave current. Yep. And the assumption is that it creates little transient pores in the cell membrane and so it gets in and sometimes you end up with four cells. A transfected and sometimes you end up with

forty thousand cells transfacted. It's a wildly useful technique and but it's a little bit hit or miss. Perfect description. We used uh my first postdoc in my lab, Catherine Schumann, sat there and tested different electroporation conditions altering these little pulse codes like that. Uh you're taking me back to my graduate and and to some extent my postdoctoral year.

It's unclear for given tissues, for given uh sequences, what's gonna go into cells, what's gonna not kill the cells. We we're walking this tightrope of how do you make this pores big enough that CRISPR will get in but that the cells don't die. And we did it, you know, and we did it and we've wor we've optimized this and It was one of those things you when it happens you you see it and you just realize

It's it's binary. Like all of a sudden you're you're editing DNA inside of of T cells. And you know, we got our foot in the door with some level of efficiency. We've gone through the roof. This is now used uh by labs widely and it's incredibly efficient and

Some cells die, but overwhelmingly you end up with cells that that are uh gene edited. Trevor Burrus, Jr. She figured out the protocol. Aaron Powell She really did. And it's been optimized. And then another grad student in my lab came in, this guy, amazing grad student, Theo Roth.

and realized that he didn't have to stop there, that we thought we were limited to just putting CRISPR in and these very small pieces of DNA called oligonucleotides that were just change a couple of nucleotides at a time. Our mindset was like maybe we can fix a mutation, an individual mutation. Theo said, Let's not stop there, let's put big pieces of DNA in. And we've pushed this boundary of being able to say, let's pick a site, make a cut.

and introduce hundreds or up to thousands of different nucleotides to be able to really write a piece of DNA code that doesn't even have to exist in nature, but then we have the precision using CRISPR to put it into a particular place in the DNA. We started a company when that when that technology worked, a company called Arsenal Biosciences that's now

In clinical trials. It's actually in its clinical third clinical trial right now for solid tumors. It's in a clinical trial for prostate cancer that's about to start enrolling patients. And that company can now do this at industrial scale. It takes patient cells, electroparates them and has now written p a long piece of like ten ten thousand nucleotides of DNA code that put in a sequence of a combination of different r receptors c including a car.

And additional gene enhancements that will make these T cells more powerful in in in a tumor microenvironment. And then they go into the bloodstream, they navigate to the prostate and they start fighting the cancer cells.

And I imagine you can also put it sounds like you're putting some um kind of resilience genes in there as well. That's exactly right. To bolster the healthy cells. To bolster the the t the T cells that carry these receptors to make them persist longer and be able to function. Exactly.

Awesome. That's happening. And you know, the that the way that that happens is that pa a patient will be selected, will go in for a blood donation, give a rather large blood donation, but those cells are then shipped to a facility that arsenal maintains. The the electroporation happens in the centralized facilities. The cells get grown up for a couple of days and tested, they get frozen down and then sent back to the patient.

Where they're the cells are then thawed and they get it's the equivalent of a blood transfusion. Now their own cells have been supercharged. to allow them to recognize cancer, but also to have the as you said, added resilience, added strength in that battle against cancer. The cells that have been modified by the CRISPR Casanine they're sitting in this bag um that get infused. A are they designed, is the CRISPR designed to to

only go after the prostate cancer cells? Um, or is there some version of this where you can inoculate against a number of different cancers? In other words, If I'm understanding correctly, if there are sort of um canonical mutation sequences that occur in all cancerous cells, is there a version of this where I give some blood

Uh you or a company, probably a company, electroporates them with uh the CRISPR-Cas9 system, brings in resil resilience uh genes for the T cells, for my T cells, um, plus Attack. Genes, right? So that are gonna destroy the cancer cells. And then I get an infusion of these when I turn, well, I'm fifty now, so like fifty-two. And then it protects against all cancers that probably are forming at multiple sites throughout my body, low mutations here, low mutations there.

Hopefully they don't, you know, proliferate. Is there a way to just short circuit cancer body wide? Aaron Powell I think that's a hope that all of us have to some extent. I think these technologies get proven out. in patients who where the risk benefit of the an unproven technology is tolerated.

And you know, I think that that in reality, uh that means that patients who have exhausted other treatment opportunities get treated and often those are the sickest patients. And I think there's good reasons for ethics where that that's where we start. Is that these technologies eventually will be proven to be safe, and they'll get more and more precise. I hope the cost would go down. And I don't know w you know.

You you talk about the other extreme of doing it preventatively, but at least we should start marching earlier and earlier in the course of diagnosis. And the hope is that, you know, m there'll be b there we're already seeing improved tools for early diagnosis of cancer, where we're detecting the earlier signs of cancer.

It'd be nice if we have the ability to start treating those early cancers that might be the ones that are the most responsive to the immune system. And then beyond that, preventative would be even better. Um I think to get there if we really want to scale up I think we also have to think about you sort of going back to your last question about delivery.

Maybe it's not always gonna be these sales good things shipped to a centralized factory and electroparated. Um, although that's been incredibly powerful and it's not stopping now. We're actually starting academically. in my in an institute that I run, the Gladstone UCSF Institute of Genomic Immunology.

We're starting a philanthropically funded CRISPR trial for multiple myeloma where we're using a different genetic program. So we we there's a huge number of diseases where we are thinking about what can we do with existing technologies. We're also starting to look for ways that the ta the deliveries of the future will happen. And different people are are coming up with different solutions, but one emerging trend is that rather than taking the cells out of the body.

And then exposing them to CRISPR and s in these targeted ways with with electroporation. What if we could put CRISPR into the body and just send it and address it just to the cells that we want to modify? We're interested in the T cells. Someone else might be interested in modifying lung or heart or neurons, right? For different diseases.

Exploding thinking about technologies. It's another area where there's just tools that are are happening so fast. Aaron Powell You know, when I was a postdoc, there was a it was all about, it seemed, for a few years.

Liposomes, Engineered Viruses, Lipid Nanoparticles (LNPs), Vaccines

Like different ways to get genes into cells. So there's electroparation, there are lentiviruses, there are adenoviruses, there are um calcium phosphate transfection, there was and on and on. One of the things that was kind of interesting, but at the time didn't really go anywhere was

um customized little uh liposomes, like little fatty bubbles. Yeah. Because fatty stuff can get onto and through cell membranes, so it makes good sense, but but with some sort of zip coding so that you could Inject these fatty bubbles. Um, or swallow them even, get them into the bloodstream, and then those fatty bubbles would go to the very specific type of liver cell or brain cell that you wanted.

Has that technology moved forward at all, the liposome technology? Dramatically. Oh great. Dramatically. Relieved to hear and relieved to hear I wasn't the one that had to do the work. Because I knew a lot of very frustrated people working on liposomes. Fortunately for me, electroporation adenoviruses. works spectacularly well. For my experiments, but a lot of people needed cell type specific in um transfection yeah through a a vein injection. So all of these things have

Gone under rapid progress. The vir let's talk with the viruses. We talked about viruses as a tool to deli as a shuttle of DNA. They naturally each one will have some range of what cells it would infect. This is for a virus this this is called tropism. What is what cells are susceptible to infection with any virus? Those would be the cells that you would be able to deliver g genetic material to with an engineered virus.

People have really advanced engineered tropism, engineering what cells a virus will deliver material to. And that can be dialed in quite precisely now in a number of different ways. So people are working on engineered viruses that

Try there's still problems. They're trying to make sure that they don't trigger immune responses, but they're getting more and more precise, both viruses and things that have virus-like properties that are sometimes called virus-like particles that are essentially viruses that can just deliver either DNA or protein to a cell that's specified by what that virus tropism is.

And that and people are working on engineering these tropisms with a lot of technologies. Because you could put drugs in them too. I mean we talk about you know like SSRIs have all these side effects. Well that's because you're getting serotonin uh you know, increases at locations you don't want it. Like that you could imagine only getting drugs to certain cells. It's it's

Super to me it's super exciting and just seems so fundamental. So I'm relieved to hear that there's b there's progress being made. Anything that can be genetically encoded, you can start imagining these types of targeting. Now you asked about lipid liposomes. Now liposomes have kind of come up with our new name is lipid nanoparticles. Lipid nanoparticles. That kinda rolls off the tongue nicely. And you know we the the abbreviation we use is L and Ps, but

A billion people around the world have now been injected with LNPs. LNPs are the technology that delivered mRNA vaccines. Ah, okay. No, but we're gonna talk about vaccines. Listen, we're going ever we're we're going into it all today. They were liposome bound. These essentially these are lipids that can deliver genetic material to cells. And this was done locally

for the COVID vaccine, but people are now engineering them with the targeting molecules that you described so that they go to particular cells. If you inject them into the body, Lipid nanoparticles naturally tend to go to the liver. So people are using these already to cure genetic diseases that where the genetic burden is affecting the cells in the liver because you can deliver CRISPR to cells in the liver.

pretty robustly with these. I have my strong view on on the COVID vaccine. I I think it was a miracle that we were able to develop something on a short timeline to address a a pandemic that was k killing p killing people. But I understand there's controversy. Leaving that aside, lipid nanoparticles are uh it's amazing that we were able to do this, that we took something that was an idea

Most people thought it would be an obscure technical thing, like you talked about like if it p would it would it ever work? All of a sudden it could be manufactured at scale, could deliver a synthetic piece of of mRNA to give a temporary instruction to cells. to make a protein to protect us.

And whether that's for COVID or for other things, all of a sudden we're again I just keep coming back to this theme where there's more and more ways that we can not only understand biology, but that we can intervene in it to treat disease.

And so now we're talking about something totally different. We're talking about delivering CRISPR, which is not the an mRNA vaccine, but we're talking about how would we get CRISPR into cells or how would we get extra pieces of genetic material, which might be an mRNA, so t into a T cell. All of this can now be done even beyond the vaccine world with the same kind of building blocks of technologies like lipid nanoparticles.

Actually there's a company out of the University of Pennsylvania that that actually developed recently a technology to make lipid nanoparticles that could be injected into the bloodstream. Think of them as these little fat bubbles, exactly as you said. But in them they they they inc included an a protein that would recognize something on the surface of T cells so that as these lipid bu bubbles were going through the blood,

They would stick preferentially to T cells and deliver mRNA to T cells. And you could actually put in an mRNA into T cells that would temporarily make A gene that it would encode A car, these artificial receptors against cancer. And they've done this now in testing in a number of models. They can actually make these CAR T cells by inject injecting lipid nanoparticles into into the body without ever taking

the T cells out of the bloodstream. And I think we're gonna see more and more things like that. F the farm industry is all of a sudden saying, Oh, c there's more ways that we can make drugs. Things don't have to just be pills anymore. They can be engineered proteins or lipid nanoparticles or viruses or engineered cells, whatever is going to be most effective at getting to the root cause of disease.

COVID Pandemic & Trust in Science, mRNA Vaccine

I wanna just talk about the COVID vaccine briefly. Yeah. Um because in my role as a public health educator. Um I was exposed to a lot of voices. Yeah. Um and I can't speak for everybody, um, certainly. But I think that at least three of the things that caused a lot of divide around um the the MRNA vaccines were first of all um the difference between mandates versus optionality. We don't have to go there, but I think that that that was a that was a major player, right?

People, especially Americans. don't like to be told what to do. That's just I've noticed that. Okay. Second of all, um it was closely related to um notions of the shutdown, which differentially impacted people. Um and that's an understatement. Right. Pe some people maintained paychecks, some people didn't, some people could work, some people couldn't. So there was that. I just am I I'm not trying to uh you know

uh soften anything here, but I think that the the vaccines were were nested in a bunch of other issues. Um again, at least three. This is not exhaustive. And then the other one, and I actually had this concern myself, which was How is it that it gets turned off? Right. Like I I can imagine a situation where I would want to put uh an mRNA into me um to do something biologically, but then I don't want it to continue to do that after a period of time.

So what in the design of that vaccine allowed it to be targeted to the cells of interest and then not continue to express in all other cells in perpetuity. I'll answer the specific question, but I think the the context that you give is also really important part of this. And I w I would take one second to talk about this. I think to to answer your first question.

We talked about DNA as the the sort of source code. We talked about proteins as what the DNA is ultimately encoding. Let's just talk for a second about what mRNA is. MRNA is the sort of temporary intermediate between those things. DNA will get what's called transcribed into mRNA, which is another nucleic acid but doesn't stick around permanently. It is the temporary instruction which will then go to the ribosome and become the template the the template for a particular protein.

The idea of an mRNA vaccine is that you're using this temporary template so that the cells that will take this off. will make proteins from this temporary template for some period of time. Now, there could be some I you can always imagine the extreme outliers of ways that this could last longer or not, but Fundamentally this is you're you're putting in an M RNA that

gives a temporary instruction to the cell to make a small part of the COVID vaccine. Now we'll have the COVID virus, very small part, right? Now just by comparison, if you get infected with COVID, you're also going to get COVID mRNA is transcribed in your cells. And, you know, th w that that that so y y there's we're talking about genetic material making MRNA either way, whether it's the MRNA from the covid

or a design small part of that covet vaccine that i f of that covet genome that we're using as a vaccine. So I think it's important to think about the risks in the context of the virus versus what we're doing with a with a vaccine. So I got the COVID vaccine enthusiastically and I and I actually I think overwhelmingly my immunol I mean I know overwhelmingly my immunology colleagues

do the same. In people who live in this world of immunology, a a great enthusiasm that this could be done and built. Now What that doesn't answer what you said about the cultural phenomenon. I'm talking just as a person, not as an immunologist. But I think we probably haven't done enough to talk about the trauma that we went through as a nation during COVID of

being fractured by people dying on one hand and all the c negative consequences as as you said of of shutdown. Shutdown of economic life, shutdown of social life. I I I think it was a period of major dislocation and we're still feeling the trauma and the people's different relationship with things like vaccine, but of science even more generally, were dislodged or accentuated by this trauma that I think we all collectively went through and we don't talk enough about.

I'll just I just give one anecdote. I d while I I spent a lot of time isolated during covet.

And was disheartened by the fact that on one hand I was watching the sort of scientific like speed race. That was, you know, actually I think one of the one of the the highlights of of the first Trump administration, Operation Warp Speed to to streamline and get coordination uh both on the science and the the regulatory side to get vaccines approved in an extraordinary timeline, taking advantage of a number of technologies and and making them all.

So I was watching this this science unfold with some some optimism, but also watching the trust in science being eroded.

I developed a side hobby, um, which is I've been I've gone back and I've been reading I've been reading presidential biographies sequentially. Uh this is this is it's just a side hobby. Now In this in reading and thinking about this sort of frustration with with how science was sort of tearing things apart, I found this sort of strange relief in reading about early American history. In seventeen ninety three, there was a yellow fever epidemic in in in um in Philadelphia.

And actually the early parties that were forming. The the Federalists and the Democrats actually took like wildly dissenting views of how to deal with an epidemic. They they had different views of what caused it, whether whether it was outside contagion or those or sanitation. And the the Democrats that at that time, the Jeffersonian Democrats, were in favor of like really extreme

uh bloodletting techniques. And the and the Hamiltonians, the the Federalists had it had a t a totally different set of techniques of baths and and more gentle treatments and they just couldn't see it eye to eye. Why am I saying all this? I think it's not new territory that in in that that these discussions of how we deal with infections which are inherently societal diseases.

unearth the societal tensions and we deal with them in different ways and we come at to them from different perspectives. And there there's a lot of things that are simultaneously being balanced in any decision of how we deal with thinking about the trade offs that we're willing to make in the face of of an of a pandemic or an epidemic.

I really appreciate that and I'm also impressed that you're reading these biographies. How do you know which biography to select? Because there are many of them. And unfortunately Walter Isaacson hasn't written them all. I love his books. So how do you select

uh the author of each biography. This is a this is an odd this is a a project that I spend a lot of time each one I I go through a period of indecision about which one I I I should read. Uhhuh. I can share my list. Okay. I'm not d I'm not done yet or this has been over several years I've been I'm I'm now up to World War Two. Aaron Ross Powell You should do a podcast someday. Just know in your copious amounts of spare time, not as a husband father running a giant lab, etcetera, and physician.

Uh you could do a podcast and and teach us what you learn. Anyway, awesome.

Sponsor: Function

I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Function. Last year I became a Function member after searching for the most comprehensive approach to lab testing. Function provides over 100 advanced lab tests that give you a key snapshot of your entire bodily health. This snapshot offers you with insights on your heart health, hormone health, immune functioning, nutrient levels, and much more.

They've also recently added tests for toxins such as BPA exposure from harmful plastic. and tests for PFASes or Forever chemicals. Function not only provides testing of over 100 biomarkers key to your physical and mental health, But it also analyzes these results and provides insights from top doctors who are expert in the relevant areas. For example, in one of my first tests with function, I learned that I had elevated levels of mercury in my blood.

Function not only helped me detect that, but offered insights into how best to reduce my mercury levels, which included limiting my tuna consumption, I'd been eating a lot of tuna, while also making an effort to eat more leafy greens and supplementing with NAC and acetylcysteine, both of which can support glutathione production and detoxification. And I should say, by taking a second function test,

That approach worked. Comprehensive blood testing is vitally important. There's so many things related to your mental and physical health that can only be detected in a blood test. The problem is blood testing has always been very expensive and complicated. In contrast, I've been super impressed by function simplicity and at the level of cost. It is very affordable. As a consequence, I decided to join their scientific advisory board, and I'm thrilled that they're sponsoring the podcast.

If you'd like to try function, you can go to functionhealth.com/slash huberman. Function currently has a wait list of over 250,000 people. But They're offering early access to Huberman Podcast listeners. Again, that's functionhealth.com slash Huberman to get early access to function. I have a question related to technologies to

Drug Delivery to Cancer, Immunotoxins, T-Cell Engagers; AI Protein Targets

killing or altering cells that we didn't cover, but since we uh we've touched on a number of them, the uh lip lipinoparticles, um lentiviruses, since we're um In a previous lifetime. I used uh in my experiments and I was excited by immunotoxins.

So an antibody against You generally need a cell surface protein and then you attach to it in our our case we use Saporin toxin, which Uh I think it's most infamous uh because it was put on the tip of an umbrella and used to assassinate somebody on a bridge someplace in some sort of uh international spy warfare in the last twenty years or so.

kill you if it goes systemic, but the idea there is that you take the support and toxin and you tether it to an antibody that then finds a cell surface protein and then kills that cell and only cell. And it works remarkably well in experimental conditions. If certain things are right. It doesn't always have the specificity you would like or the thoroughness.

Um has that been tried in cancer, um, directing toxins towards uh cancer cells? The short answer is yes. It's a it's a really interesting area. And and it and what that toxin is. Can almost be thought of as like modular that you can put uh put a different that you can think of it as two components, right? You have a targeting component.

you have in the an antibody is a natural one where uh antibody is evolved to recognize one particular type of protein. That can be the thing that targets a something on the surface of cancer cells. Um People have then w developed what's called antibody drug conjugates or basically a drug or a tox something that's gonna kill the cell.

gets appended to that antibody. And so s it's selectively delivered. You don't have to deliver the drug at systemic doses, but you can actually increase the local concentration by delivering it. preferentially to the t cancer cells that will be recognized by that antibody. It doesn't have to be drugs. People are thinking about other things. We were uh one people are now trying to attach r uh radioactive isotopes, there's radio ligand therapies that to the that can be attached to these things.

Um and I think in an extreme That's essentially what we're doing with these T cell therapies too. We're also using the the when I I've talked about this car, the chimeric antigen receptor, the outside of it that is the sensor that's being used is also an a a part of an antibody. And so essentially what we're doing is now using the antibody to target, but instead of dra dragging along a drug, it's dragging along a cell.

And so when that's engaged, the T cell is there and the T cell becomes the killing module. But the kill the cell not only the T cell not only kills the cancer cell, but could potentially be used to amplify that response, could recruit re-release things and recruit other things. So I think this general way of thinking about designing things um to drag something to a cancer site is something that people are thinking a lot about.

There's even another flavor of this that are called T cell engagers. So I talked about, okay, we can genetically put an antibody fragment on a T cell and use that to direct a T cell to a cancer. People are also making antibodies that are antibodies on both ends. Okay, so this is sometimes uh I think this is a proprietary term, but it can be called a bispecific or a bite. Uh the byte is a proprietary term. Um but basically these are two headed antibodies.

cancer cell and the other side will recognize a T cell and essentially bring these things together so that you get the T cell action locally to the cancer cell without having to do any genetic modif modification to the T cell. You actually just take advantage of T cells that are already in the body. So all of these things are now under very active development. So and some of them are approved, others are still in development. Very cool.

I'm sure people are catching on to this, but basically if you can understand the structure of things, including very, very small things, you can lego them. Yeah. And you can um put all sorts of interesting cargoes and play matchmaker between cells and um uh it's kind of infinite what what you can do. Um once you start to understand things at that scale. That's really what it's about. I'll push it one step further. I'm I'm

Actually uh helping to organize a cancer immunotherapy conference here in in LA. I'm I'm simultaneously here for for this and for that. I was at the conference yesterday and there was a talk by Amgen, big pharma company. I should disclose I'm I'm an advisor to Amgen, but this this talk was and MGIN's been one of the leaders in these bytes. I th I think they actually trademarked this idea of bi-specific T-cell engager. Um These are antibody fragments.

But uh one of the leaders at Amgen talked yesterday about how looking forward These aren't being used as just traditional antibodies that come out of of animals, but they're actually being used as AI designed protein engagers of any target you want. So essentially now it's getting to the point where if you know that something's on the surface of a cancer cell People are increasingly using AI models to design a synthetic protein that doesn't even exist in nature that w is designed to

recognize and stick to something on the surface of cancer cell. And that could be a one of these Lego blocks for these modular m multi multifaceted in T cell engagers or drug engagers or any of these other things. So this is another area where the the crosstalk between experimental capabilities and computational experiences is further accelerating what's possible.

CRISPR Embryo Modification, Ethics; Heritable Gene Editing, Diversity

Incredible. Um would you mind if I asked a couple of questions about the kind of science, sociology, and uh ethics around CRISPR? No, I'd I would love it. I'll keep this brief. Um a few years back uh we all learned, meaning the entire world learned, that uh a scientist in China had done a CRISPR-Cas experiment on

Babies. Yeah. I don't know when he did the modification. My guess is it was in utero. You'll tell us what exactly he did. This hit close to home for me because he and I were postdocs at the same time at Stanford, different labs. And the way it the news hit the world was very interesting. One of the things I benefit from now as a podcaster and not just a professor is that I can talk about the stuff that perhaps

Pure professors wouldn't be willing to. So I'll say it. It was very interesting because the world kind of braced. But didn't make a decision as to whether or not they were upset that he had done this. like put him in front of an ethics board, maybe and throw him in a cell, or give him a Nobel Prize. It was like there was this kind of moment where no one really knew what to do. Yeah. Like do you reward him? Do you punish him? Do you do nothing?

And it circulated back to Stanford because there was a question of what he had learned at Stanford, what was done at Stanford, and and the stance, as I recall, was everyone just kind of waited to see how the world treated him. This is not a disparagement of any of my colleagues. I think we didn't understand how to react to this. And then the decision was quickly made at large that he had done a bad thing. And that's kind of the last we ever heard about him were those kids.

The Chinese government condemned it publicly. Uh I think they said he was going to be punished, but it wasn't clear if he was going to be punished by being put in a jail cell, being fined, or um given a larger laboratory and more resources. It was very unclear. Playing God at some level. Yeah. Right. It's not the same as deciding to not implant some embryos that were created through IVF because they carry an extra chromosome. It's different than that. It's taking healthy children.

in this case and making a change to try and make them quote unquote super people. So I would love your thoughts on that particular instance, your uh awareness, if any, that um CRISPR in h in otherwise healthy humans has continued, and where you think this is all going. Yeah, I think you capture a lot of that moment. Uh I'm I wasn't there, but there was a international CRISPR conference that was being held, I believe, in Hong Kong at the time, and the the scientists

um got up and announced with k inc extraordinary pride in in in one of these sessions in this conference that he had done it. He had done genetic modification of embryos. And my understanding of what what had happened was that there were two twins um who were well there were there was uh were parents who wanted to have kids. And the father was HIV positive. And the modifications that they decided to try to make were to delete a gene that is if it if it's deleted

can confer resistance to HIV. This is a gene called C C R five. There's people who naturally have a certain mutation in this a cer at some frequency and mm mutations in this gene confer resistance to HIV if they're naturally occurring. So that was So there was a disease um aspect to it. Okay. I wasn't aware of that. Thank you for that clarification. It was a prophylaxis against this potential risk of HIV. There were a lot of troublesome features from what I understand. First of all, there's

state of the art methods to reduce the risk of HIV if through sperm washing and things that can be done that would I from my understanding essentially reduce the risk to near zero of transmission to thr from a father to an embryo. So I think it was a bit of a manufactured need, but there was the suppo supposed justification. Second of all, it was done um so they actually ended up generating two twins. And my understanding of how it was done.

And I don't think that this was ever published. There was some some publicity that was released. So I'm sorta piecing this together from what was uh d public at that time, but I don't think any journal ever published this in a any peer reviewed context. In concert with essentially IVF techniques. So they were fertilizing

embryos with this with this father's uh sperm, there's the mother's the mother's eggs. They created multiple embryos and then they delivered CRISPR into these embryos and trying to create mutations in the C C R five gene.

There was some variability. It was pretty early in days of CRISPR. And as I said, there's an unpredictability of what happens when you make a double-stranded break in the genome. So It was a stretch to say okay, they b they didn't exactly get the mutations that they wanted, but they proceeded nonetheless to implant these embryos.

And I know less about this, but there were also serious concerns about the way that consent was done on this. So like wha how much was informed about the a the what the actual benefits would be to these patients. My understanding is that he got up and I wasn't in the room, but I do think that there was some degree of uh uh immediate horror that this was being announced and that that it was unfolding in this way and that it hadn't been considered, it it was it was not ready.

In the wake of that, the Chinese government then announced that they were gonna punish this and I don't know the details but I believe that he under s uh underwent some period of house arrest. Okay, he do he was punished. I I believe so after I th I think after there was some degree of scientific outrage at this time. Yeah, there was this pause moment that lasted maybe a week or two. Um Okay, well you're clarifying a lot of the the details important details. again is that he's now

free and I think is is restarting a lab. I don't think in China, I think somewhere else. Um so the story might not be over yet. So th that's my understanding of of the facts. Let me I'll tell you now what I think. Yeah, please. I actually have a pretty hard line position on this, which I'm not sure all my colleagues would agree with, but I think that we should have a line in the sand where we do not introduce genetic edits that will be passed on to the next generation.

Yeah. You know, I I t I told you I dedicated my life now to creating CRISPR technologies to engineer individual cells in the immune system. But these are what we call somatic edits. These are making edits to the DNA in individual cells where those genetic consequences will be passed on to the daughter's cells, but not to the next generation of human, because those edit we're not making genetic edits in sperm or in eggs. If you do it in an embryo

All of a sudden every cell in the developing embryo will will have it, including sperm and egg. And now you've not only made a genetic change to treat a disease, or in this case to prevent a disease, as you said, in some cases it'll be imagined to make an enhancement, people have talked about

You know, maybe you wanna add you we know genes that would make people be more muscular or will there be a rush to you know, or enhanced memory. I mean many years ago there was a paper, I mean it had some issues with replication down the line, but where I think it was Joe Chen uh at Princeton um introduced maybe a mutant or an extra. I've got I forget now, it's been a while. Um

Uh case in point, I clearly don't have this receptor uh to uh the NMDA receptor, which is involved in plasticity in a subregion of the hippocampus. The idea was they were trying to make super smart mice. I remember that with that that made quite a splash at the time. I forget where that went. Yeah. May maybe Joe followed up on that. I don't know. But um but that would be the sort of thing that people are both excited about and concerned about.

You know, could you confer your offspring with better? um memory genes. Yeah. But of course we have no idea if that's a good or a bad thing. Forgetting certain things is very useful as well. I completely agree with you. And I I think the point you made is a key one. That We do have a w we l we do live in a world where people do IVF. and we do pre implantation genetic testing and we select in people up people have the option to select.

not implant embryos that have certain mutations, that's already a level of like avoiding disease in in a next generation if there's a severe mutation. I think it's not it's it's a qualitatively different step to then not just select, but to actually make a genetic change. All of a sudden now you're really hampering you're you have the ability to make some kind of mass produced genetic edit in many embryos, I worry a lot about what this means for

our offspring if they are designed rather than just born by by chance. I worry about Fads. You know, when when you think about like the Pinterest culture that we live in, where people see something on Pinterest and wanna follow on. I worry deeply about losing human div diversity if we see fads in what genes are popular for our offspring and people can order those in i in in concert with IVF.

And I I don't think we gain enough to to come close to what we would lose as a society if we embark on that journey of of editing offspring.

Deep Sequencing Embryos, Diversity; Overcoming Adversity & Resilience

Appreciate the clear stance and and answer. Uh as long as we're there, I'd love your thoughts on some of the newer technologies uh that are only available to those that can afford them. So that's an important caveat. for deep sequencing embryos from IVF. So typically with IVF you check to see that they're chromosomally normal, that they're euploid as they say, and they'll do some sequencing in the of the parents.

uh maybe of the of the embryos as well for certain mutations. But there's this whole other um industry now. I believe a a company in the Bay Area, Orchid, um, is is probably the most popular uh one or well known one, uh where if you pay a certain amount of money, they'll um deep sequence. If you pay more, they'll deeper sequence. Yeah. Um and so you're getting Some additional readout of potential disease genes. And and I I've looked at that technology and they're very clear that they're

At some point they can't draw a causal relationship between, say, like a neural ligand mutation and autism, but there are these implications based on the animal data. Or uh and so it it starts to become this Uh it's not gene editing, yeah, but it is uh deeper and deeper uh gene sequencing based selection of embryos. First of all, I'm I'm I'm sympathetic to the idea, right? Like we we we want to protect our kids from from from suffering and from disease, right?

And I understand the d idea of doing pre implantation genetic testing. If you wanna avoid a mutation or chromosomal abnormality that would really impair lifespan or quality of life for your offspring. I the impul impulse that we know that's this this sort of straightforward chromosomal testing that's done at from at the first level sh does will miss a lot of mutations.

So people I understand the idea of trying to fill that in with more deep sequencing or comprehensive sequencing of the genome. The problem is there are some mutations that if we know if we see them, we will know that they can be cause severe disease. But there's a lot that are become probabilistic and statistical and I think we're over promising what can be delivered. So all of a sudden you're using an algorithm to determine

Which embryos are more desirable than others. And I think the fact is that it's just a it's it's not an axis that actually exists. There aren't categorically more desirable or less desirable. They we want diverse diverse people. You know, how successful you're gonna be as a interplay of like how your genes inter come around and influence your community, your your environment. Those are unknowable from just looking at a DNA sequence alone. So I think that there's a

It introduces a false access. There's another book that I I would I would recommend here that I read years ago and I actually am probably overdue to go back and and reread this. This predates CRISPR technology, but uh there's a Harvard philosopher, Michael Sandel, who years ago wrote a short book called The Case Against Perfection.

And it's a really beautiful meditation on what's lost when we enter into this illusion of thinking that we can engineer towards some access of perfection rather than embracing the beauty. of chance chance and happenstance, which is like a part of our relationship with with our kids, with ourselves, of thinking uh, okay, this is this is the human experience of you're a product of some degree of chance and and circumstance.

I'll definitely check out the book. Um I I know the whole point of life is not to be a quote unquote high performer, but I I'll just say as an example, um I know of no single very successful person that doesn't have some thing about themselves that um that initially they disliked or felt that they had to overcome, which led them to pursue certain things, hopefully in a healthy way, um, and that they eventually came to embrace and is now

and are now grateful for. I I know of no exception to that. It's just kind of it it's sort of the story of of humans in many ways. It's a story of humans. perhaps are told that they're perfect in every dimension their entire lives. Um, they I can only imagine the amount of pressure they must feel. In fact, before today's discussion we were talking about people that we knew that perhaps had been told that and some of the uh fragility that that can

introduced to the psyche. I I think that's really well said. I think it goes in both ways. I think things that we think are hardships or or disabilities often end up being the things that that make us who we are and and you know, make us more sympathetic. give us a d added depth as humans. And the things that we think are the things that make us perfect are the things that are really holding us back or creating all sorts of false ideas that limit us. I couldn't agree more.

Upcoming Therapeutics, Autoimmunity & CAR T-Cells, CRISPR & Gene Function

I'd love to know what right now you're most excited about. for your own intellectual enrichment and in your lab and and like what you really feel is like the the thing that has the most electricity for you. And and if you're willing to also give us a hint of what's just right over the edge in terms of what you think will be the next big therapeutic breakthrough. um that we can look forward to. Thanks for asking that.

I'm gonna give a little bit of a long meandering answer that I mean when it comes to me, you don't have to uh succinct is not something that sort of sort of like exists in my neural circuitry, although I try. So I see this this moment. I talked about clinical trials where That are already filling me with hope.

I talked about a a biotech trial that I'm associated with for prostate cancer. I talked about an academic trial that I put a lot of work in with my colleagues over many years to open for multiple myeloma. And we have a pipeline that we're developing. We didn't even talk today about y we we haven't fully talked yet about

The idea of CAR T cells for autoimmunity. We left that open a little bit, but that's an amazing moment that we're at right now. That the same CAR T cells that are being used to get rid of B cell leukemias are also getting rid of B cells, which are contributing to autoimmune disease. So without making any change, people are already starting to see incredible responses in the early trials for lupus.

And other autoimmune diseases with T cells engineered to eliminate B cells. Fantastic. Could you m just mention a few other disease targets? I I know a few people with fibromyalgia. Um they suffer tremendously. Aaron Powell Fibromyalgia is a disease that we just don't understand. Like that is that is To talk about understudied diseases. I think fibromyalgia is something that w gets bucketed in a certain way and we just have not

figured out what's what is what it really is c what what causes it. And so my that that is its own thing. But for autoimmune diseases, these are diseases where we do know that there are immune cells going after our own tissue. in various ways. Lupus. People are talking about various engineer T cell trials for rheumatoid arthritis, for

childhood diabetes for multiple sclerosis, um and on and on. Um but those are a number that uh people are thinking about different types of immunotherapies, including gene and edited T cells, to treat these autoimmune diseases. So I'm already I guess w what I'm saying is excited about the near future of things that have come out of

decades of lab work from m labs around the world already starting to be assembled into things that are advancing through clinical pipelines. But the next wave of what's coming up behind that. is just as exciting, if not more. So I think that one of the things that makes me feel like I I have one of the great jobs out there is I right there's about thirty people in my lab.

I get the joy of m ideas bubbling up. They don't the ideas the lab don't come top down from me. They come from grad students and postdocs who have come filled with energy to bring their own ideas. And progress is being made through this conversation of people in the lab, reading papers, going to conferences, talking late at night in the lab, and I can't believe the surprises that are that are coming. So I'll g I wanna give you a couple of these. So I just look looking backwards to two thousand

thirteen, twenty fourteen, we were struggling to see if we could get CRISPR into with electroparation to make one cut in a T cell. We could barely do it. Now, if a grad student comes into my lab within a month or two, they can routinely do a CRISPR experiment where we do CRISPR where we deliver a set of thousands uh up to tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of different CRISPRs. into a population of T cells from a blood sample. So each cell will get a different CRISPR modification.

And then we can essentially race these cells against each other. So we can put them into a tumor environment and see which ones continue to grow, which ones have markers that seem like they're gonna be favorable and giving them characteristics that are gonna be strong against cancer. So we are able to do the the type of genetics that was possible in fruit flies.

But unimaginable in human cells we're doing directly in the human cells that will be the therapies of the future. We're directly learning what are the genetic modifications that will make T cells do exactly what we want. And one of the things that we just made publicly available is that we used to do these experiments and race these cells against each other and s breed at see race them against each other for one characteristic, which ones would start to make.

one cytokine. I talked about these signals that immune cells can make. Now what we can do is we can For each genetic modification we can do a complete measurement of the state of each individual cell. We with this is a technology called single cell RNA sequencing. So we measure now simultaneously all of the the RNA that's in that cell, telling us giving us a snapshot of what that cell is now able to do.

And we can also simultaneously measure which CRISPR was put into that cell. And so now we can essentially inactivate every gene in the genome in T cells and read out the consequences on the overall state of the cells. And this is technology that was developed by a number of labs around the world. We've now deployed this at a massive scale directly in primary human immune cells.

We just released 22 million cells where each one has a different CRISPR gene inactivated and we get a map of this. And I think of this Not just what we're doing in T cells, but what other labs are doing around the world, using CRISPR to read out the consequence of every gene in different cell types, in different conditions, as a sequel to the genome project.

You know, we talked about the genome giving us this draft of the DNA sequence. Now we can actually read out the function of every gene and see how each gene contributes to the behavior of every cell. And this is being used with a in as a basis for massive computational analysis. It's providing us a a real

roadmap of how cells are wired that will be the instruction manual for the next generation of T cell immunotherapies. That the lessons that we learn about how every gene behaves are now going to be actionable and these are going to be genes that we

tune or epigenetically edit or inactivate or add to genes that we will now have a recipe book for what what do we want an immune cell to do? What do we want it to recognize? What where do we want it to go? And we'll have A cheat sheet that tells us, okay, here's what here's what we should be adding or subtracting from that cell genetically to endow it with the powers that will give it precision and endurance against some disease that we want to go after.

Banking T Cells or iPSCs?, Future of Cell Programming

Amazing. I mean truly amazing. Um should I be banking T cells? Well I think the good news is that Well that's a c I I never know what the answer is. This y i I was gonna say the good news is that we we largely have T cells. Now there are w are there exceptions to that? Yes, you know, there are patients who are getting treated for certain types of cancer, and the the chemotherapy that they're getting depletes their T cells.

It's hard to know. You th you know, I guess I don't I can't say that there would never be a use, but I think we're getting better and better at being able to take whatever T cells are there and and I hope reactivate them, rein in endow them with powers. I would be disappointed if in the future we would need to go back and take b bank T cells and not be able to

Uh reengineer cells that are already there. Are there edge cases where it might be? But it's not something that I would tell people to go out and do. I it's not something I'm doing. Uh yeah, I would only do it if you told me to. Uh a colleague of yours, um, Yamanaka won a Nobel prize for uh essentially showing that you can take a skin cell, put it in a dish, give it Yamanaka factors, as it were, for

in some cases only three transcription factors and essentially revert that cell to a stem cell and then give it some other transcription factors and turn it into, I don't know, a neuron or a pancreatic cell. Should we be banking fibroblasts and putting them into that ready state, um, reverting them to the stem cell state. I I in my mind I always thought, well, if I ever need more cells of a given organ, I can always

assuming I'm I'm alive, they w you know, and they can take a skin cell and they can do all that. But I could imagine that there would be use for a cell bank, not a tissue bank. Where there are a bunch of these pluripotent hubermin in my case. Marson in your case, obviously. Uh cells that if uh you know, God forbid I needed a bunch of pancreatic eyelet cells, boom, they could have those within a week.

is su is something that's been amazing to watch. It's it's there's been ups and downs of it, of this induced pluripotent stem cell field that Shinya Yamanaka opened up. Um One of the air interesting areas is actually imagining how these IPS cells could be made into T cells, which would

Essentially create a a limitless supply of T cells or you know, I don't you don't want to even draw blood. Exactly. Which would negate the need for banking if you had your So I don't know if I again it's probably not uh something that I was be cost effective for everyone to have their their IPSLs are ready to go. I understand f from in conversation from from sh with Shinya Yamanaka that one of the things that he has been involved with is actually building sort of a bank of IPSLs

that would be compatible immune compatible with broad sets of different people. So that it could essentially be used as a transplant bank, which would might be a way to be like an intermediate step that there would be

IPS cells of available that could be transplanted with various degrees of ease into different people. And then I do think that i i I hope it gets easier and easier to make IPS cells that are matched to any patient when they're needed. So but I mean Again, like th this these different threads of things of being able to make endless s s uh supplies of any cell, direct them to any t tissue type.

And then being able to program them when the language of CRISPR. Actually, I it's worth some moment. I in twenty twenty I moved my lab from the main branch of UCSF to a a separate research institute in San Francisco called the Gladstone Institutes. It's a nonprofit research institute. My grad students still come from UCSF, University of California, San Francisco. But my lab's at Gladstone.

And one of the reasons that I moved my lab to Gladstone was a conversation when they when they were recruiting me, they brought me into the president's office. And in in the president of Gladstone's office was Shinya Yamanaka, who maintains a lab at Gladstone. And Jennifer Dowdna, who also maintains a lab at Gladstone. You had to say yes. They're very clever.

Not just a cliche. I actually remember kind of like the that feeling of hair sticking off on the back of your head of like Oh, all of a sudden these are the technologies that they these two humans have made possible and m and others, but we can now program the what the epigenetic state of a cell is thanks to the Yamanaka factors you can dial between skin and embryo and ev and then back to anything else.

and then not only epigenetically program the cell, but take the power of CRISPR and genetically program. And when you put these things together, all of a sudden we have this ability to imagine programmable cells that we can dial in and direct their behavior to either regenerate or to, in the case of the immune system, survey the immune s the body and get to the root cause of disease. And I my imagination still lies at that intersection of what's possible when we combine that with immunology.

I love it. one question I don't expect you to answer, but uh your enthusiasm for this uh is tangible. I'm excited. I know people listening are and the question is how do you sleep at night? Like it's so exciting. Like the tools are are they're here. Um and Mostly I want to say thank you. Um thank you for coming here today and giving us a absolute masterclass on the immune system, on cancer. on the technologies to improve the immune system, combat autoimmune

diseases. I mean we we got into molecular biology with some considerable degree of depth and thanks to you, it was incredibly clear. I know people learned a ton. I know I learned a ton, and I'm super excited about what you're doing. Also just the the heart and soul. There are no other words really. Um I think those are are apt. The heart and soul that you put into your work is so clear um and you are definitely in the right job. So just

Uh one request is that you come back and talk to us again um when the next advancements are made. We'd love to have you back. I'd be honored and I just I just really want to thank you. There are not enough forums that are dedicated really to the depth to talk about science. the f so much of the the joy of science is in the details and you do such a great job of letting those details really come through.

And sharing them broadly. So it's it's an honor to be here. Oh well, thank you. Um it's a labor of love and I've loved this. So come back again. Thanks.

Zero-Cost Support, YouTube, Spotify & Apple Follow, Reviews & Feedback, Sponsors, Protocols Book, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter

Thank you for joining me for today's discussion with Dr. Alex Marson. To learn more about his work, please see the links in the show note cap. If you're learning from andor enjoying this podcast, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. That's a terrific zero cost way to support us. In addition, please follow the podcast at the

by clicking the follow button on both Spotify and Apple. And on both Spotify and Apple, you can leave us up to a five-star review. And you can now leave us comments at both Spotify and Apple. Please also check out the sponsors mentioned at the beginning and throughout today's episode. That's the best way to support this podcast.

If you have questions for me or comments about the podcasts, or guests or topics that you'd like me to consider for the Huberman Lab podcast, please put those in the comment section on YouTube. I do read all the comments. For those of you that haven't heard, I have a new book coming out. It's my very first book.

It's entitled Protocols, an operating manual for the human body. This is a book that I've been working on for more than five years and that's based on more than 30 years of research and experience. And it covers protocols for everything from sleep. to exercise, to stress control, protocols related to focus and motivation. And of course I provide the scientific substantiation for the protocols that are included. The book is now available by presale at protocolsbook.com.

There, you can find links to various vendors. You can pick the one that you like best. Again, the book is called Protocols, an operating manual for the human body. And if you're not already following me on social media, I am Huberman Lab on all social media platforms. So that's Instagram, X, Threads, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

And on all those platforms, I discuss science and science-related tools, some of which overlaps with the content of the Huberman Lab Podcast, but much of which is distinct from the information on the Huberman Lab Podcast. Again, it's Huberman Lab on all social media platforms.

And if you haven't already subscribed to our Neural Network newsletter, the Neural Network Newsletter is a zero-cost monthly newsletter that includes podcast summaries as well as what we call protocols in the form of one-to-three-page PDFs. that cover everything from how to optimize your sleep, how to optimize dopamine, deliberate cold exposure. We have a foundational fitness protocol that covers cardiovascular training and resistance training.

All of that is available completely zero cost. You simply go to hubermanlab.com, go to the menu tab in the top right corner, scroll down to newsletter, and enter your email. And I should emphasize that we do not share your email with anybody. Thank you once again for joining me for today's discussion with Dr. Alex Marson. And last but certainly not least, thank you for your interest.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android