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Lex Fridman · 2021-09-01 · 3h 28m

Vincent Racaniello: Viruses and Vaccines | Lex Fridman Podcast #216

A leading virologist explains why viruses outnumber us, how vaccines really work, and why broken trust hurt the COVID response more than the virus.

Vincent Racaniello: Viruses and Vaccines | Lex Fridman Podcast #216
The guest

Vincent Racaniello — Professor of microbiology and immunology at Columbia University and a prolific science educator who hosts the This Week in Virology podcast and popular YouTube virology lectures.

The gist

Vincent Racaniello walks Lex Fridman through the fundamentals of virology, from the staggering number of viruses on Earth to the evolutionary origins of life and why viruses may have been the first replicators. He explains how viruses are classified, why RNA viruses evolve faster than DNA viruses, and how scientists manipulate them in the lab. A large portion covers SARS-CoV-2 specifically: vaccine technologies from old-school inactivated vaccines to mRNA, the science of variants, testing, masks, and antivirals like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine. Throughout, Racaniello and Fridman dwell on the collapse of public trust in science, arguing that leaders' inauthenticity and refusal to admit uncertainty did lasting damage. The conversation closes on curiosity, mortality, and the role of love and human connection during a pandemic.

Big reveals

  • The mass of ocean viruses exceeds that of all elephants on Earth a thousandfold, and lined end to end they would stretch 200 million light years.
  • Racaniello argues a virus particle is not alive; only the virus-infected cell is alive, splitting a virus into living and non-living phases.
  • He admits he was a skeptic who was wrong about mRNA vaccines, having assumed RNA was too fragile to ever work as a vaccine.
  • The oral polio vaccine actually caused polio in 8 to 10 US kids a year, and he argues we may have picked the wrong vaccine.
  • Racaniello agrees Anthony Fauci failed as a leader and communicator, contributing to a damaging decline in public trust in science.
  • He explains hydroxychloroquine scientifically could not work against COVID because lung cells let the virus bypass the pathway the drug blocks.
  • He flatly states life has no meaning and is just an accident, and that he believes there is no life elsewhere in the universe.
  • After SARS-1, scientists found a cave containing all the viruses making up SARS-1 and we should have been ready, but dropped the ball on antivirals.

Things worth remembering

  • The most common virus in human feces is a plant virus that infects peppers, called pepper mild mottle virus, because people eat peppers.
  • Bats make up 20 percent of mammals and rodents 40 percent, and these are the species most likely to give humans new viruses.
  • Rabies is the most lethal virus, with near-100 percent fatality unless vaccinated, yet the vaccine works even after you are bitten.
  • In 1950s Australia, the myxoma virus killed 99.2 percent of rabbits, then evolved to be less lethal and more transmissible over years.
  • Flu vaccines are still made the old-school way by growing virus in fertilized chicken eggs, a technique dating to the 1940s.
  • About 80 percent of COVID transmissions come from just 20 percent of infected people, a striking super-spreader pattern.
  • A PCR test measures viral RNA, not infectious virus, and below about a million copies you are not actually infectious.
  • Racaniello predicts that within 10 to 15 years most cancers will be treatable using engineered virus vectors.
  • Bacteria produce about 20 percent of the oxygen on the planet and helped kick-start Earth's oxygenation and the rise of life.

Recommended in this episode

Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.

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RecommendedMedia

Virology Lectures 2021

Vincent Racaniello

“watch his introductory lectures on youtube in particular the playlist i recommend is called virology lectures 2021” — Lex Fridman 00:00:00
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownMedia

This Week in Virology

Vincent Racaniello

“i highly recommend you check out his this week in virology podcast and watch his introductory lectures on youtube” — Lex Fridman 00:00:00
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownMedia

This Week in Parasitism

Vincent Racaniello

“you host and produce five i would say related podcasts including my favorite this week in virology also this weekend parasitism this week in microbiology” — guest 00:23:12
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownMedia

This Week in Microbiology

Vincent Racaniello

“five i would say related podcasts including my favorite this week in virology also this weekend parasitism this week in microbiology and so on” — guest 00:23:12
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownMedia

Virology Blog

Vincent Racaniello

“you actually uh on the virology blog i don't know if you're the author of that but i am yes” — Lex Fridman 02:46:16
Find it on Amazon