SciShow Tangents - Poison
Episode Date: December 6, 2022It's said that the dose makes the poison, but that doesn't change the fact that some poison is just more poison-y than others. This week, we get a lethal dose of venomous knowledge!SciShow Tangents is... on YouTube! Go to www.youtube.com/scishowtangents to check out this episode with the added bonus of seeing our faces! Head to www.patreon.com/SciShowTangents to find out how you can help support SciShow Tangents, and see all the cool perks you’ll get in return, like bonus episodes and a monthly newsletter!And go to https://store.dftba.com/collections/scishow-tangents to buy your very own, genuine SciShow Tangents sticker!A big thank you to Patreon subscribers Garth Riley and Tom Mosner for helping to make the show possible!Follow us on Twitter @SciShowTangents, where we’ll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions! While you're at it, check out the Tangents crew on Twitter: Ceri: @ceriley Sam: @im_sam_schultz Hank: @hankgreenSources:[Definition]Toxin vs. poison vs. venomhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/brv.12062https://www.discovermagazine.com/health/whats-in-a-name-venoms-vs-poisons-toxinology-101[Dead or Not Dead][Trivia Question]Belgian musicians getting sick from botulismhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5133258/#b01https://www.jstor.org/stable/30099331[Fact Off]Ants disinfect using their butt poisonhttps://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(18)31147-3https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/736123https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982212013784https://www2.palomar.edu/users/warmstrong/Antintro.htmhttps://elifesciences.org/articles/60287https://www.mississippientomologicalmuseum.org.msstate.edu/Researchtaxapages/Formicidaepages/genericpages/Lasius.neglectus.htmBacteriophage that stole spider venom proteinhttps://evolution.berkeley.edu/evo-news/black-widow-virus-results-from-evolution-not-genetic-engineering/https://www.livescience.com/56443-black-widow-spider-dna-found-inside-virus.htmlhttps://news.vanderbilt.edu/2016/10/11/virus-carrying-dna-of-black-widow-spider-toxin-discovered/https://www.newscientist.com/article/2108671-virus-steals-black-widow-poison-gene-to-help-it-attack/[Ask the Science Couch]Effects of ingesting venomhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6266834/https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0273230014003419?via%3Dihubhttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7985199/https://www.jem-journal.com/article/S0736-4679(15)01377-3/fulltexthttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3349795/[Butt One More Thing]Goats can deactivate poisonous plant compoundshttps://calag.ucanr.edu/Archive/?article=ca.v046n03p4https://agresearchfoundation.oregonstate.edu/sites/agresearchfoundation.oregonstate.edu/files/bionaz_2014-16_final.pdfhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0031938409002510?via%3Dihub
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to SciShow Tangents, the lightly competitive science knowledge showcase.
I'm your host, Hank Green. And joining me this week, as always, is science expert, Sari Reilly.
Hi.
And our resident deafery man, Sam Schultz.
Just hear those sleigh bells ring-a-ling, ding, ding, ding.
Oh, thanks for the reminder.
A croon-in.
What are you getting for your partner this Christmas?
Oh.
I walked into a trap. We're this on november 4th and i
don't know let me hit you with another one then i just wanted to see james acaster in seattle
about a month ago and and uh it was absolute delight he talked a lot about like the needs of
the sort of five-year-old version of him that lives inside of him still.
And still has a lot of needs that he has to take care of.
So what, if you had a chance, would you buy five-year-old you for Christmas?
This is another trap.
I still buy a lot of toys and stuff.
It's the exact same thing I want now.
Yeah.
Sarah, you go first.
I also buy the toys that I want.
Let me go first.
Let me go first.
Please go first, Hank.
Yeah.
Because I, here's what I do.
You know how you can get like slime, like kids can get slime and then they put their hands and they play with it?
Yeah.
I want that, but I want like at least five gallons i think
that the amount of slime that you get is like by far not enough i want to be able to like sink my
whole head into the slime i want to i want to like put my arms in it i want to like like a
i want to go outside and just like be a slime monster. I want to put it over my, you know, five-year-old little body and run around.
Hank, you want to know what?
I was going to also say slime or some kind of goo.
Because I feel like when you grow up, you're like, if I get the goo, it's just going to get ruined or it's going to get on my carpet.
And then my wife's going to be pissed.
When you're five and you don't got a wife to worry about, you're going to be slinging slime everywhere.
Yeah, I want to like, I want to put slime on me and then get on a bike just ride around the neighborhood
i don't i think you both could achieve this dream get a kiddie pool get a lot of like a big five
gallon bucket of elmer's glue and some borax i bet you could buy a lot of slime on amazon
you could probably subscribe to slime on Amazon.
Like you can subscribe to Bottle Caps.
Slime of the month.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've actually even have, I've got like mutuals on TikTok who are slime makers.
So I could DM them and be like, hey, how much?
How much for five gallons?
Can I get a bulk slime discount?
I'm sure a lot of it's just the packaging process of like getting it into the little can.
Let's skip that step.
Send me the bucket. The postage on that would be insane though well maybe they'll just put it in their trunk and drive it over that's a real santa delivering it on chris this morning too so also
very exciting for five-year-old yeah it's been tricky for santa since slime happened because
it's so heavy and so messy it gets all over that everything to do with santa is made of like
crushed velvet and that does not mix well that don't come out that don't come out
he has a lot more outfits now than back in the old day where he just keep re-wearing it
okay now i'm picturing five-year-old sari running around being happy and cute and inquisitive what is sari what does little sari want i feel like i would want
unlimited time in some sort of like insectarium like rent a museum for myself maybe just biosphere
too but if it was safe for kids like just running around you just you want, I think my big dream is,
is a bucket of slime.
And so he's like,
I want biosphere too.
I want to do a Pauly Shore movie.
Five-year-old Sari would just want to run around unattended and,
uh,
you want a bunch of bugs.
Yeah.
I had so many like paper notebooks that I made
where I would walk around our yard
and tape sticks and leaves into it.
And so if I could just do that,
but with more cool stuff than what I could find in our yard,
I think I would be happy.
I'm so happy for all of our little five-year-old selves.
If only we could get out of childhood free of trauma,
I'm sure that none of us would be so driven and...
Yeah, that's what we are. We're driven.
All right. Every week here on Tangent, we get together to try to one-up, amaze, and delight each other with science facts while also trying to stay on topic.
Our panelists are playing for glory and for Hank Bucks, which I will be awarding as we play. And at the end of the episode, one of them will be crowned
the winner. Now, as always, we introduced this week's topic with the traditional science poem.
This week, it's from me. I like to have a drink sometimes when I'm out with my friends,
a couple of beers, a couple of shots to celebrate weekends. But another couple shots from there,
I know I've made a mistake. I'm not having fun anymore. My body needs a break. I've got my Uber headed home.
It'll be here any minute. The cemeteries are full of folks who didn't know their limit.
It's the dose that makes the poison, the quantity that counts. Anything will kill you if you have
the right amount. I like to go on Twitter. It's an easy thing to do. Open it up and see what
fresh hell's waiting there for you. But then I close it down and have breakfast with my wife. Playing Wordle over coffee is a great part of my life. If I didn't take some breaks, I don't know if I'd be alive. That much Twitter all day long, could anyone survive? It's the dose that makes the poison, the quantity that counts. Anything will kill you if you have the right amount.
The topic for the day
is poison up in the air so whether or not twitter will still exist by the time this airs
i may have quit by then that's that's certainly possible uh or at least scaled back my presence
so poison uh am i right sari it's everything as long as you have enough.
I would say that anything can be considered.
You can have toxic amounts of anything.
I don't know if scientists would look at everything in the world and be like.
I would call that a poison.
Yeah.
Would they look at Twitter and be like, I would call that a poison?
Probably.
Sociologists say yes.
What about a specific substance that interferes
with the body's ability
to do body stuff?
So toxin is the overall thing.
And I think it's like
interferes with body stuff
at relatively small amounts
is how I would put it.
Is the amount of the thing needed
is relatively small small which is what
makes it dangerous and toxic as opposed to just like a food that we eat or water that we drink
or twitter that we scroll on the difference that a lot of people like to draw between
poison and venom is how they enter your body so toxin is just like if you want to talk about bad things that are out there, things that can harm you in small doses.
You're always accidentally saying poison or venom when you mean venom or poison.
But if you say toxin, you're good every time.
Yes, that's my strategy.
That's my science communication tip for everyone listening.
Whenever I'm a little bit unsure i use toxin
instead and i'm like i know that's gonna no one's gonna call me out for that i almost texted you
guys to be like should we just call this episode toxin because i'm having a hell of a time
about poison we can make this episode in spirit about toxin poison is a sexier word though we're gonna keep it's poison how's venom compared to
poison and then it's cool too ah toxin sucks compared to the okay toxins too technical toxins
the nerd version and then you get poisons and venoms venom so poison you eat if you ingest it
then it's poisonous and venom eats you or is injected somewhere into your body
then it's venom so like a sting a bite can be venomous a berry uh can be poisonous what if
i swallow a bee and it stings my tummy i was having the same question earlier uh if a if a beast stung inside your tummy i would
still call it a venom because the sting is the method of delivery if it dissolved in your tummy
and then you went oh i feel sick then that's a poison i got bee poisoning and then there was a
2014 paper that i was reading that uh when you get to like the middle zone of poisons and venoms, there are animals that spray.
And so it's like, well, not quite injecting it.
It's not a stinger.
It's not a bite, but it's not as passive as poison.
Like you're not necessarily being eaten.
You're like you have this poison that you create.
You have this toxin that you create and are halfway active but when
when it sprays on you then that's when it absorbs into your skin or something ultimately there is a
line here where it gets fuzzy also did they name these two things first and then later they were
like oh maybe that's kind of the same thing it feels a little like that to me it feels a little
like we sort of retroactively had to apply definitions to these we already got these two really cool words though so we can't really get
rid of either get rid of them let's just make up a bullshit definition for one of them well they
kind of had a difference from their from their root words so poison comes from potare which means
to drink and so poison is very in the in family. Like you drink something and then it's bad for you.
And then you're dead.
It's like a borrowing from French.
So I don't know.
Poisson.
I don't speak French.
Don't I mean fish?
One of those words fish.
It does sound like the fish word.
Yeah.
Be careful, French people.
Don't make that mistake.
Yeah.
Poisson is fish in French.
What is poison in French?
Also, very similar.
It is poison. It is just spelled the
exact same way. Do I know how to
pronounce it? Absolutely not. Poison.
Poison.
I thought that was
Catherine.
I love Catherine.
I'm standing there with you.
Just writing it.
She's always here listening to us podcast live, but only one third of it.
What a horrible, horrible realization.
Venom comes from Latin venenum, which is poison.
So yes, it means something.
But then I think it evolved to something that was
secreted by an animal or transferred by biting venom means poison yeah this is or just maybe
probably means toxin but probably means talk yeah probably mean more accurately yeah they
might not have even sort of understood that a venom was a thing it was like a snake bite like
the problem wasn't the thing the snake injected in you.
It was the snake, you know?
Yeah.
Snakes are bad.
Things that hurt are like,
that's the animal's thing.
Whereas poison is oftentimes
something that people do to people.
All right.
I feel informed on our topic.
We're going to move on now
to the quiz portion of our show.
And that means we're going to be playing
Dead or Not Dead.
It's a special, note for the new Tangents
game. I'm going to tell you
the name of an animal, and you have to imagine
that you are that animal.
Then I will be offering you something that might
sound potentially appetizing to you,
as said animal. As a catch, though,
it could be poison. It's up to you to
decide whether or not that
meal will leave you dead
or not dead. I love this. All right. So you are, for this first one, a black-headed grosbeak,
a bird found in the western part of North America. Its song has been described by
allaboutbirds.org as like a tipsy robin welcoming spring. So they're having a good time over there.
Yeah, that sounds great. And you might migrate down to central Mexico when the weather gets org as like a tipsy robin welcoming spring so they're having a good time over there and you
might migrate down to central mexico when the weather gets cold i'm offering you an insect
that you might run into on your path south that has distinctive black and orange wings would this
leave you dead or not dead well black and orange that seems like the don't eat me color but then
there's other guys who pretend to do the don't eat me color.
So it really is kind of up in the air.
I think dead.
I think a gross beak shouldn't be messing with that kind of thing.
I wouldn't where I want.
I'd eat a nice berry instead.
You logicked it all out.
I would say as a gross beak, I'm brave.
Why am I called a gross beak?
Because you got gross stuff in there in your
beak yeah i got gross stuff in there i think it's actually from french for big but i'm just
okay well if i have a big big beak i can crunch that bug i'll crunch it so um i'm gonna say not
dead the answer is not dead because i offered you a monarch butterfly i know that's not what
you were thinking when you heard orange and black
insects, but that is what it is, which is
poisonous to many animals thanks to its
ability to consume another poison,
milkweed. Milkweed is the same
type of poison that comes from the poison arrow
tree, and it can cause cardiac arrest in
humans and animals besides
humans. These compounds interfere
with the sodium potassium pumps in
your muscles that messes with
your heartbeat. But monarch butterflies are able to consume milkweed thanks to a set of mutations
that enable the sodium pump to function despite the compounds. And it turns out that the black
headed grosbeak also has a similar set of mutations as do several other monarch butterfly consumers,
including the Mexican black eared deer mouse. This mutation is an example of convergent evolution.
It comes in handy for the black-headed
grosbeak, which eats monarch butterflies as
it migrates south. So it would
kill you, and it's happened in the
butterfly, and in a
bird, and in a mouse.
If you ate the bird, would you die?
Uh, if a
human ate a bird that was
full, just chock full of of butterfly it's just like the
butterflies just goosh but the bird on the bird on its own is not poisonous no no okay i don't
think so but maybe i haven't tried next question it's not in my list of facts you are a yellow
spotted monitor lizard that lives
in Australia.
You are brown with various
light-colored spots, and
you live on the ground
digging holes to nest in.
But you're also great at
climbing, and you can
sprint on your hind legs.
You have long, forked,
bluish tongue that you
use to look for prey by
sensing odor molecules.
This sounds like a grand
old time for you.
I'm offering you a large brown warty toad
that was brought to Australia in the 1930s
to help control pests on sugar cane farms,
but has unsurprisingly spread beyond the farms.
Would this leave you dead or not dead?
So toads, I feel same way.
I understand why this game is so hard
because they're the guys that are poisonous.
There are plenty of toads that have the toxic mucus on their outsides.
And then there are probably some guys that just pretend to.
Or maybe my blue tongue has some sort of anti-toxin, anti-poison antidote.
The blue tongue could be a clue.
I'm going to say die.
Dead.
Toads, don't mess with them.
They got these big, like, they have a
Chad-type look to them. They're walking
around. The toads or the lizards?
The lizards.
They're walking around, they're like, oh, delicious
lizard. And then,
yeah, they're going to croak. They're going to eat anything in their path
and these toads are no good for them.
They're dead. The answer is
dead. As a monitor lizard, it would take you less than 30 seconds of having that toad in no good for them. They're dead. The answer is dead. As a monitor lizard,
it would take you less than 30 seconds
of having that toad in your mouth to die.
Scientists have reported that 90%
of yellow spotted monitors have died
in areas that have been taken over by cane toads.
That's a bummer.
However, it turns out that smaller juvenile toads
are slightly less poisonous to monitor lizards,
a fact that scientists decided to use
to see if they could teach monitor lizards
to not eat cane toads.
So they presented young cane toads to monitor lizards
via a fishing pole.
And when the lizard ate the small toads,
they would get a little sick,
but not so much to leave permanent damage.
And that appeared to be enough
to convince the monitor lizards
to not give them a second try.
Don't want they gotta go tell their friends or something?
Well, no, you just gotta hit every one of them okay one at a time baby toads that's a wild way to do it i would think maybe you could like make a meatloaf that looks like a toad and just like make it taste
real bad but no they just find the baby ones put them on a fishing pole and and semi-poison a
lizard science a little puppet a little toad puppet and go
what scare the lizard so they run away yeah uh that's how i would do it round number three our
final round you are the african crested rat roughly the size of a rabbit with black and white fur
that makes you look kind of like a skunk scientists used to think that you lived alone but it turns
out that you're social and you like to purr at your fellow crested rat friends.
I'm offering you the bark of a small tree
that has broad leaves and berries that taste sweet,
but slightly bitter when ripe.
Would this leave you dead or not dead?
I think we both know the answer to this, don't we?
I think we both know.
I was going to put on a show for the podcast, Sam.
Do you know the answer?
I thought you were joking.
I'm pretty sure this is the thing that makes them poisonous, right?
The thing it eats and it grooms itself or something.
And then the rat is imbued with poison powers.
So he's fine.
Is that right?
This is definitely the poisonous rodent like that exists it's very metal
it has spikes it is poisonous i don't know what gives it its poison though a lot of times it's
insects like frogs oh and birds that are poisonous uh get them from insects but this one could get
it from bark i just feel like you wrote an episode episode of SciShow that I animated about this subject.
Is that the case? Probably yes.
Yeah, okay.
But then I put that information where the information goes, which is to the ether.
The space between the worlds.
Then it became a lingering fun fact in my brain where come time for this episode, I was like, I think I know about a poisonous rodent.
Oh, shoot.
I'm doubting myself.
I think he's okay, though.
Yeah.
The bark, it's fine.
The answer, indeed, is not dead.
In fact, as you were saying, you probably should chew on this bark if you are this rodent because this is the poison arrow tree, which I mentioned earlier.
And it's very toxic to mammals.
It can lead to vomiting,
difficulty breathing, and cardiac arrest at high doses. It can also be used as heart medicines at lower doses. But you know what's also poisonous? The fur of the African crested rat, because the
rat likes to chew on this bark. When researchers studied the rat in captivity, they watched them
take their spit after chewing and apply it to their fur, coating it in the poison.
And they hypothesize that the rats are able to tolerate the toxins from the bark because of their four-chambered stomachs and all the gut bacteria that can break this stuff down.
And then they just wipe the poison on their bodies.
Cool.
Also, the berries, when ripe, are not poisonous.
Only the bark.
Oh.
Of the tree.
Not of the rats.
The rat berries don't mess with.
Well, that means that Sam has two points and Sari got all three of those.
Right.
Next up,
we're going to take a short break.
Then it will be time for the fact.
Hello. Hello and welcome back, everybody. It's time for the Fact Off. Our panelists have brought science facts to present to me in an attempt to blow my mind. And after they've presented
their facts, I will judge them and award Hank Bucks any way I see fit. But to decide who goes
first, I have a trivia question for you. Throughout history, people have found ways to repurpose poisons into medicine, like Botox, for example,
which is made from a toxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum. The toxin
is responsible for botulism, which is very bad and dangerous, and it targets nerves and can lead to
paralysis and death. Clostridium botulinum was discovered towards the end of the 19th century by Professor Emile
van Ermenghem
at the University of Ghent.
A group of Belgian musicians had contracted
botulism after performing at a funeral
and eating smoked ham.
Oh no!
Three of the musicians died, and their organs
along with the smoked ham
were sent to Ermenghem for his
bacterial expertise.
How many musicians, three of them died, how many got sick with botulism this is not where i thought this question was gonna go i was gonna be like how few grams of
botulism can it be and you still die no give me a number of musicians how many how many musicians
do you need at a funeral is the real question.
Yeah.
I would think three would be plenty.
Maybe it was a funeral for a really rich guy, and it was like a full orchestra because this was back in the day.
But how many hams couldn't have all been bad because it didn't say it, just one ham.
So how many hams can a full orchestra eat?
I think a full orchestra could eat seven hams.
So what's seven divided by 50?
How many people are in a full orchestra?
50.
What's seven divided by 50?
I'm asking for real.
You could have just said, how many people can one ham feed?
It would have been a more direct path to the same answer.
Like eight?
50 divided, 56 divided by seven? Leave me alone. Sorry. Like eight? Fifty divided. Fifty six divided by seven.
Hank, leave me alone.
Sorry.
I'm just letting you know.
Seven.
The answer is seven.
7.14.
So how many musicians got sick?
7.14 musicians.
Three of them died.
One person just got a little bit.
A little pinky.
I think Belgian musicians love to smoke ham.
So I think everyone is in on the ham. i think everyone is in on the ham i think everyone's in on the ham okay okay okay i think i think all the ham was bad i think
they were all going ham for the ham and then they put all the ham in a big thing and they
mixed it all up so you don't know which ham is which. Yeah, they just had a big ham platter. Everyone was grabbing
from who knows what.
So I think 20 of them got sick.
The answer is 34.
Oh my God.
That's horrible.
So I don't know how,
but it was definitely
more than one ham
unless they were all
having very small bites.
They were passing
the ham around.
Take a lick.
Take a lick.
Everybody take a lick. That sucks lick uh so yeah all right so sarah that means you
get to go first or not whichever you want i'll go first i'll dive into the the ham the smoked
ham abyss uh ants are tidy critters as we've talked about on this podcast before maybe me i
talk about ants a lot i think but they can't go to
the grocery store and buy some soap or disinfecting wipes like we can so instead they have to rely on
a hyper local organic cleaning product poison brewed in their own butts more precisely the
backmost butt segment of an ant's body is called the gaster and certain subfamilies use a multi-purpose hole
called an acidopore at the tip of their gaster to spray a toxic substance as a weapon or a defense
mechanism and this hole also connects to the anus and the pheromone gland in case you were curious
so three purpose hole cool scientists have analyzed these poisons and noticed that a major component of them is formic acid, which makes sense because formica is Latin for ant, which can be corrosive to lots of things from human eyes and skin to bacterial membranes or even rival ants.
But they're not just spraying creatures they don't like. This is a multipurpose poison.
a multi-purpose poison. The species Lassius neglectus has been observed spraying poison inside their nests or any nest boxes created experimentally, including on their larvae,
to kill off pathogens like bacteria or fungi. And no, they are not worried about this disinfectant
acid burning their soft, fragile little babies because, as a 2018 paper showed, this species' larvae are
swaddled in silk cocoons that act as protection. Sometimes these ants also suck poison straight
into their mouths from their acidopores and groom the cocoons to remove any pesky fungal spores.
And in a 2020 study, another species called Camptonotus floridinus was observed gargling and or swallowing their own poison after
eating food or drinking water, basically trying to kill any pathogens before they can fester and
multiply in their little tummies. Across these projects, there are various experimental ways
to prevent the ants from spreading their poison to see what happened, such as super gluing parts
of their bodies shut or making them really cold so they'd stop moving. Just a little sad. But whenever the ants couldn't
disinfect with their poison, they had lower survival rates. So we think it actually does
something. It wasn't just that their butts were super glued shut. I feel like that might also
lower my survival rate. You know, yeah, your butt and jaw super glued shut but you never know we think it's we think it's
the disinfectant because we use toxic substances to clean all the time and like even our immune
system uses destroying particles sometimes so it makes sense that plenty of non-human animals do
too and i guess in nature mildly poisoning yourself is worth it if it means you
stay alive longer wow windex ants i got really distracted wondering one question what is the
hole with the most uses the most is three the most you mean you mean of any of any animal yeah
i feel like it's a we're just gonna put that one out there because i don't think we're gonna have
an answer to that question that's definitely right soaca. We're just going to put that one out there. Because I don't think we're going to have an answer to that question.
That's definitely right.
So I'm going to toss it out to the audience.
What's the hole with the most uses?
Yes.
Sam wants to know.
At SciShow Tangents.
Yeah, tell me.
If Twitter makes it.
Oh, no.
All right, wild.
Sari, that's very weird.
Sam, what do you got?
Sari and Hank, let me teach you a little something about viruses.
And if I'm wrong at any point, please tell me, because this was really hard.
When you're a virus, you sort of have to pick whether you're going to go after cells with nuclei or cells without nuclei.
True so far?
And you're pretty much locked into that choice.
Like, you want to infect a bacteria?
Well, you, my friend, are a bacteriophage, and you aren't going to be able to go after cells with nuclei, like, say, maybe spider cells.
And sometimes when you're a virus multiplying in cells, you tend to pick up things in those cells like DNA.
Like, let's say that you're a bacteriophage.
You probably got some bacteria DNA floating around in you on account of all the bacteria that you infect.
But assumedly, you couldn't have any spider DNA, right? Yeah. some bacteria DNA floating around in you on account of all the bacteria that you infect.
But assumedly, you couldn't have any spider DNA, right? Am I right, Samar? Okay.
Yeah, if you're a bacteriophage, I have no reason to have some spider DNA in you.
Ah, but what do we do when we assume, my friends? You see, in 2016, researchers at Vanderbilt who are sequencing the genome of a bacteriophage called
WO found DNA that matches DNA that black widows use to make a toxin in their venom.
But what the heck?
If these viruses only target bacteria, how did it get spider DNA inside of it?
WO's target is a bacteria called Wolbachia, and Wolbachia infects arthropods like black
widows.
And when it infects arthropods,
it hides inside cell membranes, safe and sound from bacteriophages. And similar to a virus,
as a bacteria is doing all that slipping in and out of cells, it's going to get some junk stuck
to it along the way, including DNA from its arthropod hosts. And as previously mentioned,
viruses end up with DNA in them too, and they don't care if that DNA comes from a bacteria or a black widow. So now you've got a bacteriophage with black widow toxin DNA, which is what they found, and it's the first time that animal DNA has ever been found in a bacteriophage.
toxin but the toxin makes holes in cell membranes and these viruses do have to get inside of arthropod cell membranes to get to wolbachia so it seems sort of like they do use it and in this
case i think the toxin would be considered a poison thus validating this as a poison fact
but there's also a bit of a chicken and an egg situation here that scientists are also looking into. Did the bacteriophage get the ability to make cell damaging poison from the spider DNA passed to it from a bacteria?
Or did spiders get the ability to make cell damaging venom from bacteriophage DNA passed to it from a bacteria?
Nobody knows, obviously.
But there are only those two options.
So it's one of those two.
And either one is very cool.
Yeah. And WO also contains DNA sequences that are used in animal cells to sense
pathogens and trigger cell death and avoid immune responses. So while it's way more likely that this
virus has just collected a bunch of junk over the eons, it and other viruses like it might have
taught ourselves a lot of tricks that make life possible.
other viruses like it might have taught ourselves a lot of tricks that make life possible.
Sari, I have a question for you, which is which way is cooler for it to get this DNA? Is it cooler for the spider to have gotten the toxin from a bacteriophage, or is it cooler
for the bacteriophage to have gotten it from a bacteria that got it from the spider?
to have gotten it from a bacteria that got it from the spider.
I think spider from bacteria phage is cooler because spiders were just harmless at one point.
Well, I think they have more than just that one toxin.
I like that it got it from the spider
because it couldn't get it directly from the spider.
It would have to get it from the bacteria that got it from the spider. Which is't get it directly from the spider would have to get it from the bacteria right right just wild for genes to just be like we i'll go wherever well now i have
to choose which is the weird cooler weirder fact and sari's got a point is a point ahead already
will it be ants disinfecting their whole situation with their butt poison, including their insides and their outsides and their nests.
Or researchers finding spider DNA in a bacteriophage.
But how?
These are both very good.
I think that Sarah is going to pull away from this one,
but only because she came into it with the lead.
Those points used to not mean anything.
I'm offended that they mean something else.
They're a tiebreaker.
They're really a tiebreaker.
That's what they're there for.
You used to give us like 400 points arbitrarily for our facts.
You've changed.
Well, look, Sam, you got 400 and Sari got 400 and those, you got 401.
Oh, shoot.
Okay.
Yeah.
Cha-ching!
Everybody gets 400 all right now it's time to ask the science couch where we've
got a listener question for our couch of finally home finally Jan Rhett Sammy's on discord and
Emily Nied Bala on YouTube ask is there poisonous venom I mean if you put it in your blood you put
it in your interstitial tissues and it's doing damage, you put it in your tummy, it's very likely to also do damage.
I'm sure that there are venoms that aren't poisonous, that in the acidic environment of your stomach, they'd be pretty immediately inactivated.
But there's got to be lots that you wouldn't want to put very much of in you.
And also, as I said in the poem, you have enough of anything.
It's going to get you uncomfortable.
Did that make sense, Sari?
How did I do the the message of
scishow tangents is do not drink venom do not eat it please don't just go to one of those like places
where they make anti-venom and they're constantly milking snakes and take a shot don't do that
don't do that that's rude yeah but if you want to get really, really technical about it, venom, because it goes into your bloodstream, that's more an easier distribution pathway.
So venoms often contain big proteins that can get denatured.
And proteins getting denatured is just when there's enough heat or a molecular reaction
for some reason, then they unfold and then they can't do the thing. So a toxic protein would no
longer be toxic and mess with your cells and be the poison anymore. Venoms do have different
toxicity, whether you inject them or you take them orally and researchers do look
into this mostly on mice it's always mice of injecting things versus feeding them to them and
to to test and the main thing is that we just don't have we don't we don't really test venoms
like eating a lot of different types of venoms. But when we do, there are like a couple things we've learned.
And so that's what I found.
One study tested 17 different snake venoms just to see whether you could heat them and denature their proteins.
And all but five of the 17, so 12 of them after heating,
lost basically all of their activity.
They're just food now.
That's just protein.
That's like eating a steak.
And it's just, I wouldn't say that,
but say it's like some dirty water maybe.
Not something particularly nutritious either,
but there are certain beverages that integrate venom inside them.
So like snake wine is prepared by steeping a whole venomous snake in rice wine.
and there has been at least one person who was admitted to the hospital because his blood stopped clotting after drinking snake wine. Other people have emerged from it anecdotally fine.
I was looking at lab protocols, and it seems like 70% ethanol is the standard
cleaning supply for any toxin venom waste. So I would say if you're making alcohol out of venom
i would make it at least uh 70 abv which i don't think wine is necessarily i don't think so uh
you would want like a distilled grain and then submerge your snake in it and then you can say
you've drunk you can make snake ever
clear but you cannot make snake wine yeah but it sounds like it's gonna cause a lot of problems
it sounds bad it sounds everything sounds bad but like high enough concentrations of ethanol
might help denature the proteins like that's that's the idea too also would take care of any
bacteria that might be growing yeah i don't like
the idea of i mean the only other fact i have is that tetrodotoxin which is mostly known for
puffer fish so if you eat poorly prepared puffer fish where the the gland that contains the
tetrodotoxin has been severed and leaks into the rest of the flesh, then you will be poisoned.
But tetrodotoxin is also used as a venom by other species. And so there are,
biologically speaking, some species that use the exact same compound as a venom and poison,
depending on where you look in the animal kingdom. So yes, even without drinking snake venom,
there is poisonous venom out there because they're all toxins. They all fall under the same umbrella and some animals just deliver the same
toxin in a different way. Cool. Well, if you want to ask the science couch your question,
you can follow us on Twitter at SciShow Tangents, where we'll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes
every week. Or you can join the SciShow Tangents Patreon and ask us on our Discord. Thank you to
Broken Thumbs on Discord and at Reality-3
and everybody else who asked us your questions for this episode.
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Thank you for joining us.
I've been Hank Green.
I've been Sari Reilly.
And I've been Sam Schultz.
SciShow Tangents is created by all of us and produced by Sam Schultz.
Our editor is Seth Glicksman. Our story editor is Alan Fillo. Thank you.
And remember, the mind is not a vessel to be filled, but a fire. But one more thing.
Goats can eat plants like poison oak without being harmed by the urushiol oils that can cause horrible rashes on humans.
And surprisingly, it doesn't seem like researchers know how goats protect themselves, like if there are proteins in their spit that help.
But an article from 1992 found that in goats that were only fed poison oak for 10 days,
over 90% of the urushiol from the leaves was absorbed or broken down during
digestion leaving less than nine percent of it in their poop and none in their milk or pee so if you
use goats for landscaping there's probably no need to worry about poison poop but don't roll around
in it anyway please i mean that's still like nine percent Seems like plenty. How the heck is it? If it's like exclusively Yerushal eating.
Where is it going?
It's not in their milk or their pee.
And you can eat goats.
What's going on here?
It's probably turned into different.
It's broken down chemically.
Okay.
Okay.
They're not storing it up in some kind of sack or something.
That'd be great though.
That's how the African crested rat would do it.
Yeah.
Have a big Yerushal sack and it would spray it on predators.
And I'd have it on my shoulder and I'd get it to do it to people who are rude to me at the grocery store.
Yeah.
It's only goats and rats meet each other or else they'll start getting ideas.
Yeah.
They'll whisper to each other.
Transfer some genes and we'll all be in lots of trouble.
Yeah.
Hmm.