1 00:00:02,760 --> 00:00:06,960 The practice of science has shaped the modern era, 2 00:00:06,960 --> 00:00:09,800 but how are discoveries made? 3 00:00:09,800 --> 00:00:12,680 And how does science progress? 4 00:00:12,680 --> 00:00:16,760 Three British scientists, world leaders in their fields, 5 00:00:16,760 --> 00:00:22,040 have changed our understanding of our universe, our planet and ourselves. 6 00:00:22,040 --> 00:00:27,880 A physicist whose mysterious radio signals from space re-wrote astronomy. 7 00:00:27,880 --> 00:00:30,920 She actually recognised that there was something happening. 8 00:00:30,920 --> 00:00:36,520 I suspect that perhaps only 1 in 100 people would have spotted it. 9 00:00:36,520 --> 00:00:42,560 A chemist whose radical theory about our planet divides the scientific world. 10 00:00:42,560 --> 00:00:48,240 He's one of the greatest thinkers of the current age and destined to go down in history. 11 00:00:48,240 --> 00:00:53,880 And a biologist who discovered the secret of life in a sea urchin. 12 00:00:53,880 --> 00:00:57,960 Your fundamental discoveries have profoundly increased 13 00:00:57,960 --> 00:01:02,440 our understanding of how the cell cycle is controlled. 14 00:01:02,440 --> 00:01:07,000 Their stories tell us about the nature of scientific enquiry in the modern world. 15 00:01:07,000 --> 00:01:11,600 About how scientific breakthroughs are made, 16 00:01:11,600 --> 00:01:15,200 and about the workings of the scientific brain. 17 00:01:34,520 --> 00:01:37,400 Scientists are very keen to... to get at the truth, 18 00:01:37,400 --> 00:01:41,000 to get to the bottom of things, but there is no such thing as ultimate truth. 19 00:01:41,000 --> 00:01:44,480 Every time you turn over one stone and you find something 20 00:01:44,480 --> 00:01:47,720 interesting underneath and that just leads you to another stone. 21 00:01:47,720 --> 00:01:51,280 And there are layers, it's sort of real onion skin, and go down and down 22 00:01:51,280 --> 00:01:55,600 and down and down and down, and there always wrinkles to be figured out. 23 00:01:55,600 --> 00:01:58,280 And what's curious, I've found, is that some things 24 00:01:58,280 --> 00:02:01,320 are very easy to find out once you know how to find them out. 25 00:02:01,320 --> 00:02:05,240 Some things, very simple questions, turn out to be amazingly difficult. 26 00:02:05,240 --> 00:02:10,480 It's utterly unpredictable which ones sort of fall out and which ones don't. 27 00:02:15,200 --> 00:02:19,000 Tim Hunt's remarkable career has led to the understanding 28 00:02:19,000 --> 00:02:21,840 of one of the greatest scientific mysteries of all. 29 00:02:21,840 --> 00:02:23,360 Cell division. 30 00:02:23,360 --> 00:02:27,800 The complex process in all plants and all animals 31 00:02:27,800 --> 00:02:30,800 that underpins life itself. 32 00:02:31,840 --> 00:02:37,320 That it happens and even why it happens are straightforward propositions, 33 00:02:37,320 --> 00:02:43,960 but until Tim Hunt, nobody knew exactly how one cell divided to become two. 34 00:02:52,320 --> 00:02:55,400 The unravelling of that key mechanism was so fundamental 35 00:02:55,400 --> 00:03:01,840 to the understanding of life that in 2001 Hunt was awarded the Nobel Prize. 36 00:03:05,040 --> 00:03:11,200 It was the crowning glory of a life devoted to scientific research at the very highest level. 37 00:03:11,200 --> 00:03:17,280 Recognition of a discovery that owed its existence to Tim Hunt's singular approach to science. 38 00:03:19,360 --> 00:03:24,720 One moment you're ignorant, and the next moment you sort of get that little tiny, tiny clue 39 00:03:24,720 --> 00:03:30,840 that sort of sheds an enormous amount of light on the whole thing. 40 00:03:32,440 --> 00:03:37,160 That's a sort of mysterious thing about science. It's different from engineering. 41 00:03:37,160 --> 00:03:42,640 I mean, you've been able to build a bridge over a river for thousands of years. 42 00:03:42,640 --> 00:03:45,760 The basic principles are understood. 43 00:03:45,760 --> 00:03:50,640 But in science you're never quite sure where you are actually, most of the time. 44 00:03:50,640 --> 00:03:54,440 You know, you've got to enjoy swimming in this sea 45 00:03:54,440 --> 00:03:57,320 of unknowingness. Otherwise what's the point? 46 00:04:01,400 --> 00:04:04,400 There's a famous quote from a physicist named Leon Lederman, 47 00:04:04,400 --> 00:04:08,800 which says, "Those who never stop asking silly questions grow up to be scientists". 48 00:04:08,800 --> 00:04:12,840 And Tim, to me, is the exemplar of that sort of person because there is 49 00:04:12,840 --> 00:04:16,080 nothing that Tim doesn't want to know the answer to. 50 00:04:16,080 --> 00:04:21,000 One of the things he thinks about is why the sky is blue. 51 00:04:21,000 --> 00:04:22,720 Questions like that. 52 00:04:22,720 --> 00:04:26,760 And what I think we're seeing is a very curious mind, 53 00:04:26,760 --> 00:04:30,840 the sort of mind that a child has, which always asks questions. 54 00:04:30,840 --> 00:04:35,600 And most people lose that curiosity, but Tim has it in spades. 55 00:04:35,600 --> 00:04:40,120 I like to tell the story of having learned that I'm a Nobel Laureate, 56 00:04:40,120 --> 00:04:43,680 of my daughter, who was then seven, Celia, 57 00:04:45,240 --> 00:04:48,760 saying, "Daddy, why is the ceiling opaque?" 58 00:04:48,760 --> 00:04:53,800 And I looked up at the ceiling, oh, light doesn't get through the ceiling. And then... 59 00:04:53,800 --> 00:04:59,560 then I looked out of her window and I thought, "Oh, goodness, how does light get through the window?" 60 00:04:59,560 --> 00:05:03,120 And I realised we'd done all the sort of measuring refractive indices 61 00:05:03,120 --> 00:05:08,160 for A level, but nobody had ever told us why light gets through the glass 62 00:05:08,160 --> 00:05:10,680 but doesn't get through the wall. 63 00:05:10,680 --> 00:05:15,560 And this seems like a really rather fundamental thing, so I then started asking people, 64 00:05:15,560 --> 00:05:17,400 how does it work? How does it work? 65 00:05:17,400 --> 00:05:22,080 And physicist friends, biologist friends and absolutely everybody I ran into, you know? 66 00:05:22,080 --> 00:05:24,760 Why does light get through glass? 67 00:05:24,760 --> 00:05:28,960 I mean it was so interesting, different people use different approaches. 68 00:05:28,960 --> 00:05:32,200 This is a good example of how a biologist thinks about things. 69 00:05:32,200 --> 00:05:37,280 So when I sort of... I knew that glass was a frozen liquid. 70 00:05:37,280 --> 00:05:39,680 So I thought, well, what other liquids? 71 00:05:39,680 --> 00:05:42,160 Maybe it's because it's a liquid that light... 72 00:05:42,160 --> 00:05:47,520 Then I suddenly realised that mercury was a liquid and light is reflected off mercury. 73 00:05:47,520 --> 00:05:52,280 It doesn't go through mercury at all. So that hypothesis was out the window. 74 00:05:52,280 --> 00:05:56,720 And then I thought about carbon, and carbon comes in the blackest black 75 00:05:56,720 --> 00:06:00,240 that absorbs light better than absolutely anything on Earth. 76 00:06:00,240 --> 00:06:06,720 But also in diamond, which is the sort of sparkliest, most translucent stuff you could possibly imagine. 77 00:06:06,720 --> 00:06:10,960 And that then tells you that it's to do with the electrons, 78 00:06:10,960 --> 00:06:15,000 how the electronic configurations of the actual material. 79 00:06:15,000 --> 00:06:18,480 And then you realise that it's to do with the theories of how photons 80 00:06:18,480 --> 00:06:23,760 interact with electrons and then you know you're lost, basically! 81 00:06:23,760 --> 00:06:27,400 He writes a problems book with his friend, John Wilson, and they once 82 00:06:27,400 --> 00:06:32,120 worked out how far up an Alp one Mars bar would take you. 83 00:06:32,120 --> 00:06:34,840 It's that sort of thing. How many calories are there? 84 00:06:34,840 --> 00:06:39,400 What do calories translate to in terms of vertical motion for a human? 85 00:06:39,400 --> 00:06:42,440 So he's doing that, I think, in his head most of the time. 86 00:06:42,440 --> 00:06:47,320 Except when he's looking vacant, when he really is vacant. He must have some of those moments. 87 00:06:47,320 --> 00:06:49,680 But I think he is continuously thinking about 88 00:06:49,680 --> 00:06:53,480 most of the situations he's in and wondering what's happening. 89 00:06:56,520 --> 00:07:01,720 Tim Hunt's passion for scientific enquiry started when he was a small boy. 90 00:07:03,200 --> 00:07:06,640 I just loved old radio sets and there were a lot around. 91 00:07:06,640 --> 00:07:11,520 I mean they were just so amazing and so beautifully made and they were the tuning device. 92 00:07:11,520 --> 00:07:14,720 I guess I longed to be an electrical engineer and be able to 93 00:07:14,720 --> 00:07:18,960 design the circuits. Although I was completely hopeless, I couldn't do it. 94 00:07:18,960 --> 00:07:24,720 I loved it, I loved it. I loved making motors and microphones and loudspeakers. 95 00:07:24,720 --> 00:07:27,160 Always wanted to understand how things worked. 96 00:07:27,160 --> 00:07:31,960 I mean, here, you stick this Bakelite box on the table and you 97 00:07:31,960 --> 00:07:36,600 tune the dial and voices come from the universe towards you. 98 00:07:36,600 --> 00:07:40,560 And you look inside, "What's doing this?" It's just these glowing valves. 99 00:07:42,200 --> 00:07:47,920 I remember making fuses too, that was good fun. So you soak a piece of string in sodium chlorate. 100 00:07:47,920 --> 00:07:51,600 And then I remember one time, we tried to accelerate its drying out 101 00:07:51,600 --> 00:07:55,560 so we put it under the grill, which was a big mistake cos the thing went kaboom! 102 00:07:57,360 --> 00:08:02,280 He was older than I was, so he was the leader and I was the follower... 103 00:08:02,280 --> 00:08:05,360 behind, if I'm to be absolutely honest. 104 00:08:05,360 --> 00:08:09,800 Which was good. He was good, he was imaginative about it, you know? 105 00:08:09,800 --> 00:08:12,160 We did interesting and fun things. 106 00:08:12,160 --> 00:08:15,440 I suppose we were quite scientific about it really. 107 00:08:15,440 --> 00:08:21,160 Now I come to think of it, I think he's very, sort of inquisitive. He likes to try everything out. 108 00:08:21,160 --> 00:08:25,080 I just wanted to know how things work, all the time. How do things... 109 00:08:25,080 --> 00:08:27,200 What's behind this, you know? 110 00:08:27,200 --> 00:08:30,920 And I loved the idea that you could, you know, there was... 111 00:08:30,920 --> 00:08:35,360 a sort of simple explanation behind everything you could see. 112 00:08:36,400 --> 00:08:41,080 This passion to really understand how things worked, persisted 113 00:08:41,080 --> 00:08:44,040 and shaped his entire scientific career. 114 00:08:44,040 --> 00:08:47,800 It led him to the challenge of understanding life itself 115 00:08:47,800 --> 00:08:51,000 and to the fundamental process that drives it. 116 00:08:51,000 --> 00:08:55,080 Our lives start with a single cell. 117 00:08:55,080 --> 00:08:58,320 That first cell splits to become two, 118 00:08:58,320 --> 00:09:03,800 and then they in turn divide into two to become four, and so on. 119 00:09:03,800 --> 00:09:08,480 So, after just 48 doublings, you have a hundred thousand billion cells 120 00:09:08,480 --> 00:09:13,040 in your body, and you're ready to spring forth as a human being. 121 00:09:14,640 --> 00:09:18,880 The miracle of cell division is, at its most dramatic, 122 00:09:18,880 --> 00:09:21,600 a process that creates new life. 123 00:09:21,600 --> 00:09:24,960 But it's also fundamental to maintaining life, 124 00:09:24,960 --> 00:09:28,600 and it's this that reveals the complexity at its core. 125 00:09:30,440 --> 00:09:34,520 Everything is being replaced all of the time. 126 00:09:34,520 --> 00:09:37,760 There are new molecules being put in place of old ones. 127 00:09:37,760 --> 00:09:39,880 The old ones are sort of recycled and... 128 00:09:39,880 --> 00:09:44,320 I always remember when I went as a junior proctor, 129 00:09:44,320 --> 00:09:50,560 we went and visited this air-force base, and I was very thrilled because we saw a Canberra bomber. 130 00:09:54,720 --> 00:09:57,160 So I asked, "Gosh, is this really an original?" 131 00:09:57,160 --> 00:10:00,680 They said, "The pilot's seat might be, but everything else... 132 00:10:00,680 --> 00:10:02,760 "it's got new wings, it's got new fuselage, 133 00:10:02,760 --> 00:10:07,240 "it's got new this..." The thing had been totally replaced 134 00:10:07,240 --> 00:10:10,600 and yet it was still a Canberra bomber and not some other kind. 135 00:10:10,600 --> 00:10:13,480 It wasn't a Spitfire, it wasn't anything. We're like that. 136 00:10:16,760 --> 00:10:20,800 Life and cells have the ability to patch themselves all of the time. 137 00:10:20,800 --> 00:10:23,880 Damage is being done all of the time. 138 00:10:23,880 --> 00:10:27,720 You have a new nose basically, certainly every seven years. 139 00:10:27,720 --> 00:10:31,200 I mean there isn't a single thing, component, in your nose left. 140 00:10:31,200 --> 00:10:36,080 But the amazing thing is it's still your nose, you know? It doesn't...it hasn't grown, 141 00:10:36,080 --> 00:10:40,440 it hasn't shrunk, it's still got the same shape that you were born with, so to speak. 142 00:10:40,440 --> 00:10:42,320 Absolutely remarkable, you know? 143 00:10:42,320 --> 00:10:44,240 So how these cells know... 144 00:10:44,240 --> 00:10:48,840 I mean there's a cell here, in the tip of my nose, that knows it's a cell in the tip of my nose 145 00:10:48,840 --> 00:10:52,720 and if something happens and that cell dies then, it's neighbours say, 146 00:10:52,720 --> 00:10:54,960 "Oh, dear. Tim's lost the tip of his nose. 147 00:10:54,960 --> 00:10:57,560 "We'd better put in a new cell there cos it's gone." 148 00:10:57,560 --> 00:10:59,800 And that's replaced by cell division. 149 00:11:02,440 --> 00:11:05,680 For Hunt, understanding this great mystery 150 00:11:05,680 --> 00:11:09,120 means breaking it down to its smallest components. 151 00:11:09,120 --> 00:11:14,440 Life, all life, can be understood as a series of complex mechanisms, 152 00:11:14,440 --> 00:11:19,840 a myriad of individual processes happening within the cell. 153 00:11:19,840 --> 00:11:23,280 The way that I think of it is that, you imagine yourself shrunk down 154 00:11:23,280 --> 00:11:27,440 to the size of a molecule, and you're standing by this amazing molecular machine 155 00:11:27,440 --> 00:11:29,880 and watching how all the things, 156 00:11:29,880 --> 00:11:33,160 come in and out and pull each other and push each other. 157 00:11:33,160 --> 00:11:36,000 Those are the terms in which you want to understand it. 158 00:11:36,000 --> 00:11:39,240 There are different philosophies of how you should do science 159 00:11:39,240 --> 00:11:41,880 or can do science, and one philosophy 160 00:11:41,880 --> 00:11:48,800 is reductionism. The idea that you can explain everything in terms of the smallest bits inside it. 161 00:11:48,800 --> 00:11:54,840 Like explaining the whole of nature in terms of atoms, or quarks, or sub-atomic particles, 162 00:11:54,840 --> 00:11:58,200 and that way of thinking has led to molecular biology. 163 00:11:58,200 --> 00:12:01,560 The way to understand life is to understand the smallest things 164 00:12:01,560 --> 00:12:05,640 in living organisms, molecules, DNA, proteins and so forth. 165 00:12:05,640 --> 00:12:11,520 And that somehow, out of understanding all the details, the big picture will emerge. 166 00:12:11,520 --> 00:12:14,520 Tim is definitely working within that tradition. 167 00:12:14,520 --> 00:12:19,240 This approach had started when he was a teenager, when he came across 168 00:12:19,240 --> 00:12:23,840 a problem that would take him more than 20 years to solve. 169 00:12:23,840 --> 00:12:29,120 When I was doing A level biology, I remember seeing an amazing movie of biochemical pathways 170 00:12:29,120 --> 00:12:32,480 with compounds flowing down and cycles going round 171 00:12:32,480 --> 00:12:35,120 and things spinning off and all that kind of stuff. 172 00:12:35,120 --> 00:12:38,400 I remember thinking at the time it was all very well these pathways, 173 00:12:38,400 --> 00:12:40,720 but there didn't seem to be any control. 174 00:12:40,720 --> 00:12:44,200 How could you have all those reactions going on simultaneously? 175 00:12:44,200 --> 00:12:46,240 There's got to be something controlling it. 176 00:12:46,240 --> 00:12:48,320 This was very thrilling. A kind of revelation. 177 00:12:50,160 --> 00:12:56,240 So, what I suddenly realised was that control was the fundamental issue of all life. 178 00:12:56,240 --> 00:13:00,680 From then on, I knew that being a biologist was what I was cut out for. 179 00:13:08,400 --> 00:13:12,240 Tim Hunt was brought up in Oxford, where the disciplines 180 00:13:12,240 --> 00:13:17,000 of the academic life and a passion for detail, were part of his heritage. 181 00:13:19,800 --> 00:13:25,640 Dad was something called a Keeper of the Western Manuscript at the Bodleian Library. 182 00:13:29,480 --> 00:13:34,320 He had a sort of encyclopaedic feel for what was where, 183 00:13:34,320 --> 00:13:37,920 and you could use these manuscripts, 184 00:13:37,920 --> 00:13:44,960 which were actually bound into books, to trace who knew what, when. 185 00:13:47,160 --> 00:13:52,680 Manuscripts were copied by monks. There was no printing in those days. 186 00:13:52,680 --> 00:13:55,840 Everything had to be copied, and the monk would make the odd mistake. 187 00:13:55,840 --> 00:14:02,160 But those mistakes then tended to be copied faithfully by the next copyist. 188 00:14:02,160 --> 00:14:06,920 Then that book would be taken to the next monastery, and so you could actually 189 00:14:06,920 --> 00:14:12,840 trace a genealogical tree of the spread of knowledge across Europe by this technique. 190 00:14:16,000 --> 00:14:18,920 His office at the Bodleian was quite remarkable. 191 00:14:18,920 --> 00:14:23,560 There was a huge table. It was quite a big room, and in the middle of the table, the papers, 192 00:14:23,560 --> 00:14:26,200 the letters were about a foot deep, or something. 193 00:14:26,200 --> 00:14:29,200 And then towards the edge they sort of thinned out rather, 194 00:14:29,200 --> 00:14:31,680 cos otherwise they'd have spilled onto the floor. 195 00:14:31,680 --> 00:14:35,920 So I don't know how he managed his correspondence, but I'm exactly the same. 196 00:14:37,280 --> 00:14:41,880 It's a sort of classification system whereby the less important things 197 00:14:41,880 --> 00:14:47,320 fractionate to the bottom of the pile and the important things either stay on the top or rise to the top. 198 00:14:49,360 --> 00:14:53,680 Tim and my Dad are very alike in many, many ways. 199 00:14:53,680 --> 00:14:57,680 They are both very scholarly. 200 00:14:57,680 --> 00:15:04,760 Tim is a stickler for science and the way that it is carried out 201 00:15:04,760 --> 00:15:10,240 and for all the principles of keeping science honest. 202 00:15:10,240 --> 00:15:15,600 My father was an absolute stickler for scholarship. 203 00:15:17,480 --> 00:15:23,400 Dad was very keen on the right way of doing things, and I've always felt that too, in science. 204 00:15:23,400 --> 00:15:29,760 And that's served me well because it's the details in biology that unlocks the secrets. 205 00:15:32,400 --> 00:15:38,520 Hunt's academic career began in earnest when he went to Cambridge to read natural sciences. 206 00:15:38,520 --> 00:15:45,240 He found himself thrown into a world of scientific optimism and mild eccentricity. 207 00:15:45,240 --> 00:15:49,240 Tim and I were very close friends. We used to do a lot of things together. 208 00:15:49,240 --> 00:15:52,720 We were often called the Terrible Two. I'm not quite sure why 209 00:15:52,720 --> 00:15:55,760 I don't think we were particularly terrible, but... 210 00:15:55,760 --> 00:15:57,280 they were... 211 00:15:59,160 --> 00:16:03,680 ..I think people found us a sort of unusual pair of people to have around. 212 00:16:07,320 --> 00:16:12,240 Most people had just ordinary white lab coats, but Tim and I dyed ours 213 00:16:12,440 --> 00:16:15,280 and his most characteristic clothing at the time 214 00:16:15,280 --> 00:16:21,840 was a pink boiler suit that he used to wear at the lab, and indeed, walking around Cambridge. 215 00:16:21,840 --> 00:16:26,320 And in the winter this was... Wasn't warm enough, 216 00:16:26,320 --> 00:16:31,160 so he needed something warmer. Then he had sort of third-hand fur coats. 217 00:16:31,160 --> 00:16:35,600 So he wore these rather eccentric, long fur coats over his pink boiler suit. 218 00:16:36,920 --> 00:16:40,560 You never felt that it was an affectation in his case. 219 00:16:40,560 --> 00:16:43,280 He made eccentricity seem normal. 220 00:16:47,720 --> 00:16:50,880 We found rooms in The Eagle pub 221 00:16:50,880 --> 00:16:55,480 and we lived there for three years, while we were doing our PhDs. 222 00:16:55,480 --> 00:17:00,160 We were nocturnal, so we used to go back into the lab and start work 223 00:17:00,160 --> 00:17:04,880 about ten, and usually work through till three or four in the morning. 224 00:17:04,880 --> 00:17:10,560 And we had loudspeakers in both our labs and we draped wires over the outside of the building. 225 00:17:10,560 --> 00:17:16,440 And so at night we had the whole laboratory resounding to this wonderful music. 226 00:17:16,440 --> 00:17:23,000 Sort of Monteverdi operas, symphonies, going on all night in the lab and the whole lab echoed. 227 00:17:25,520 --> 00:17:29,600 So we had a very nice way of working there. 228 00:17:33,560 --> 00:17:38,760 Hunt had arrived at Cambridge at precisely the right time for a young scientist 229 00:17:38,760 --> 00:17:43,080 who was passionate about the emerging science of molecular biology. 230 00:17:46,480 --> 00:17:48,480 I think Cambridge was... 231 00:17:50,120 --> 00:17:53,640 ..a good place for high objectives. 232 00:17:54,800 --> 00:17:56,440 It was a site of great science 233 00:17:56,440 --> 00:18:01,160 and you were supposed to do it in a sort of understated way. 234 00:18:01,160 --> 00:18:07,840 And when I think back at it, it was probably then...in biology, 235 00:18:07,840 --> 00:18:12,080 the leading university in the world. If you just put what people were trying to do. 236 00:18:12,080 --> 00:18:17,120 There was no other place which had the focus on important things. 237 00:18:17,120 --> 00:18:23,240 'Dr James Watson, aged only 34, an American biologist who worked for two years at Cambridge. 238 00:18:23,240 --> 00:18:27,640 'Francis Crick, aged 46, worked in the Admiralty on mine detection 239 00:18:27,640 --> 00:18:29,960 'during the war, then switched to biology. 240 00:18:29,960 --> 00:18:36,000 'They puzzled about the mechanism of inheritance that makes you so much like your parents. 241 00:18:36,000 --> 00:18:39,160 'Between them, they shared the Nobel Prize for medicine'. 242 00:18:39,160 --> 00:18:42,840 I think Tim was very impressed by the molecular approach 243 00:18:42,840 --> 00:18:47,000 that Crick was advocating, and indeed most people were advocating. 244 00:18:47,000 --> 00:18:50,760 And that was the sort of high noon of molecular biology, 245 00:18:50,760 --> 00:18:54,720 the genetic code had just been cracked, 246 00:18:54,720 --> 00:18:59,000 the mechanism of protein synthesis had just been worked out. 247 00:18:59,000 --> 00:19:02,680 Tim was working out some of the details of all this. 248 00:19:02,680 --> 00:19:04,800 It was a period of enormous optimism 249 00:19:04,800 --> 00:19:08,840 and people thought that this was the way forward to understand life. 250 00:19:10,400 --> 00:19:17,160 When Watson and Crick lounged around, chatting about things about which they knew nothing, 251 00:19:17,160 --> 00:19:21,520 but as a result of this, they discovered the structure of DNA, the most important... 252 00:19:22,120 --> 00:19:27,080 arguably the most important scientific, biological discovery of the 20th century. 253 00:19:27,080 --> 00:19:32,480 There's more than one way of doing good science, and that's extremely true, you know? 254 00:19:32,480 --> 00:19:34,920 I mean you just have to take... it's so hard. 255 00:19:34,920 --> 00:19:38,560 I think that's what a lot of people don't understand, it's so hard, 256 00:19:38,560 --> 00:19:42,440 and so slow that you have to take little clues 257 00:19:42,440 --> 00:19:44,680 from wherever they come from. 258 00:19:45,680 --> 00:19:50,360 Jim Watson was a fellow of my college and don't quite know 259 00:19:50,360 --> 00:19:53,960 how I first met him, but I mean he would just drop by. 260 00:19:53,960 --> 00:19:56,280 Jim has an amazing property. 261 00:19:56,280 --> 00:20:01,440 He sort of drops by, he sort of pops out in your life at crucial moments. 262 00:20:03,760 --> 00:20:06,760 Very interesting man, very interesting man. 263 00:20:06,760 --> 00:20:10,800 You could actually see that he also really, really cared about 264 00:20:10,800 --> 00:20:15,240 getting to the bottom of things, and that's what's finally important. 265 00:20:15,240 --> 00:20:21,000 I mean, those people who are actually trying to get to the bottom of things, not for their own glory, 266 00:20:21,000 --> 00:20:26,320 but just because they really, really want to understand. I think that's terribly important. 267 00:20:26,320 --> 00:20:29,560 Cambridge was always rather amusing in those days because 268 00:20:29,560 --> 00:20:33,760 Francis would have about one idea I think every two weeks 269 00:20:33,760 --> 00:20:37,200 and it'd take a couple of days for him to be convinced it was no good. 270 00:20:37,200 --> 00:20:39,720 And in those couple of days we'd... 271 00:20:39,720 --> 00:20:43,800 he'd never stop talking, and if we were in sort of 272 00:20:43,800 --> 00:20:48,040 good spirits we could, you know, really ask him difficult questions. 273 00:20:48,040 --> 00:20:51,080 I'm very much a hero worshipper. 274 00:20:51,080 --> 00:20:57,040 Francis Crick was really our hero, you know? Omnipresent figure at seminars. 275 00:20:57,040 --> 00:21:02,920 He'd often be sort of sat at the back of a seminar and he would almost always ask questions. 276 00:21:02,920 --> 00:21:07,400 Sometimes in the...if it was OK, within the body of the talk. 277 00:21:07,400 --> 00:21:12,200 And these questions were always trying to clarify things. To get to the bottom of things. 278 00:21:12,200 --> 00:21:17,080 And unlike some people who ask, in Cambridge, who ask questions to show how clever THEY were, 279 00:21:17,080 --> 00:21:20,960 actually, they were often questions, which revealed how ignorant he was. 280 00:21:20,960 --> 00:21:24,800 But he still had the confidence to ask, because if you didn't understand 281 00:21:24,800 --> 00:21:28,560 that particular point, the whole thing just would be incomprehensible. 282 00:21:28,560 --> 00:21:32,360 Certain things I think can be thought to be alive. 283 00:21:32,360 --> 00:21:34,880 I think we would agree that you and I are alive. 284 00:21:34,880 --> 00:21:38,520 The difficulty comes with the borderline cases, like the viruses, 285 00:21:38,520 --> 00:21:41,880 and I think really what it comes to is you're really arguing about 286 00:21:41,880 --> 00:21:43,720 a word when you ask the question. 287 00:21:43,720 --> 00:21:46,640 Is a virus... is the polio virus alive, for example? 288 00:21:46,640 --> 00:21:51,840 Tim, because he started working on how proteins are made, the process called translation, 289 00:21:51,840 --> 00:21:54,280 he was very connected to those people because 290 00:21:54,280 --> 00:21:58,040 that was part of the central dogma. DNA makes RNA, makes protein. 291 00:21:58,040 --> 00:22:00,520 And the question is how do you make protein? 292 00:22:00,520 --> 00:22:04,600 What are the nuts and bolts of those steps and how do you control that process? 293 00:22:04,600 --> 00:22:07,080 That's really where Tim started as a scientist. 294 00:22:08,880 --> 00:22:12,760 It was the beginning of a journey that would lead to Hunt unravelling 295 00:22:12,760 --> 00:22:15,360 the fundamental mystery of cell division. 296 00:22:15,360 --> 00:22:19,840 A journey that began with understanding the biochemistry of proteins. 297 00:22:25,160 --> 00:22:29,240 Proteins do absolutely everything. I used to enjoy telling students, 298 00:22:29,240 --> 00:22:34,760 when we sort of started out on a journey through cell biology and biochemistry that, 299 00:22:34,760 --> 00:22:38,800 I look at your face and I'm looking at proteins, you know? 300 00:22:38,800 --> 00:22:43,680 That's your skin and I can see that your blood is red because your lips are pink, 301 00:22:43,680 --> 00:22:50,520 and the eyes are clear but that's protein specially arranged so that the light can go through it. 302 00:22:50,520 --> 00:22:53,880 So, the hair is a different kind of protein 303 00:22:53,880 --> 00:22:57,240 from the skin and related but different. 304 00:22:57,240 --> 00:22:59,920 And so on. So that's all... that's all protein. 305 00:22:59,920 --> 00:23:02,880 Everything you're made of, stuff you can really feel, 306 00:23:02,880 --> 00:23:07,600 it's tough stuff, you know? If you've ever eaten a piece of gristle you know how ghastly 307 00:23:07,600 --> 00:23:12,680 and tough protein can be. But they can also catalyse chemical reactions 308 00:23:12,680 --> 00:23:16,960 to make sure that what you eat then becomes you, 309 00:23:16,960 --> 00:23:21,200 and you alone because you break down all the proteins into their components, 310 00:23:21,200 --> 00:23:25,800 and then build them up again to your own cells' components. 311 00:23:25,800 --> 00:23:30,520 At Cambridge, Tim Hunt began working on the problem of how individual 312 00:23:30,520 --> 00:23:37,040 proteins were made, and specifically how this process was controlled. 313 00:23:37,040 --> 00:23:39,520 What became clear 314 00:23:39,520 --> 00:23:43,560 and what was nice about all of this stuff is that you could... 315 00:23:43,560 --> 00:23:47,240 you could turn protein synthesis on and off. 316 00:23:47,240 --> 00:23:51,320 And it was the fact that you could turn it on and off 317 00:23:51,320 --> 00:23:57,680 meant that you were really studying the control of protein synthesis in a test tube. 318 00:23:57,680 --> 00:24:02,640 And finding out what the molecular mechanism behind that switch was, 319 00:24:02,640 --> 00:24:05,880 became a sort of all-consuming goal. 320 00:24:11,760 --> 00:24:17,240 In 1968, Tim Hunt received an invitation that would change his life. 321 00:24:19,280 --> 00:24:22,400 I'd come to New York to work with a man called Irving London, 322 00:24:22,400 --> 00:24:28,200 who was actually the Head of the Department of Medicine at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. 323 00:24:28,200 --> 00:24:32,720 But he was very keen on research and he was interested in exactly 324 00:24:32,720 --> 00:24:36,960 the same problem as I was, which was the control of protein synthesis. 325 00:24:39,440 --> 00:24:44,200 I lived on the Upper West Side, not far Columbia University really, 326 00:24:44,200 --> 00:24:47,920 but had to travel to the Far East Bronx. 327 00:24:47,920 --> 00:24:51,400 I mean probably about a 40-minute subway ride... 328 00:24:53,720 --> 00:24:57,280 through some of the roughest, crime-ridden districts in the world. 329 00:24:57,280 --> 00:24:59,720 There was no question of looking respectable. 330 00:25:02,760 --> 00:25:05,800 I used to read The New York Times from cover to cover going out, 331 00:25:05,800 --> 00:25:12,280 and the Journal of Molecular Biology coming home, quite often, usually pretty late at night. 332 00:25:12,280 --> 00:25:16,840 It was a cultural, as well as a scientific opportunity for Hunt, 333 00:25:16,840 --> 00:25:21,240 who went about documenting his time in the us by taking photographs. 334 00:25:26,040 --> 00:25:29,200 I saved up enough money to buy a Pentax camera 335 00:25:29,200 --> 00:25:32,680 that had a little meter built into it, and this was the beginnings 336 00:25:32,680 --> 00:25:37,520 of the real revolution. So you didn't have to worry about exposures and all that kind of stuff. 337 00:25:40,040 --> 00:25:44,280 Very obsessed with these sort of great French photographers 338 00:25:44,280 --> 00:25:47,880 who sort of somehow sort of capture the minute of the passing scene. 339 00:25:50,520 --> 00:25:52,120 I absolutely loved that. 340 00:25:56,920 --> 00:26:04,320 In the lab, Hunt and Irving London were trying to capture significant moments in protein synthesis. 341 00:26:04,320 --> 00:26:10,200 They separated the individual proteins manufactured in cells using chromatography. 342 00:26:10,200 --> 00:26:13,840 Each horizontal line represents an individual protein 343 00:26:13,840 --> 00:26:17,120 and each column, a different point in time. 344 00:26:21,880 --> 00:26:26,200 You have to keep on taking time points and, I don't know, 345 00:26:26,200 --> 00:26:30,920 half a dozen, maybe ten samples per time course would be enough. 346 00:26:32,520 --> 00:26:38,440 The technique made it possible to see the ebb and flow of proteins as they were produced in the cell, 347 00:26:38,440 --> 00:26:42,520 in a way that taking a single measurement could not. 348 00:26:42,520 --> 00:26:44,760 I learned a great deal about technique. 349 00:26:44,760 --> 00:26:50,000 Watching, measuring the rates of protein synthesis and being precise about controls. 350 00:26:50,000 --> 00:26:52,840 And making sure that you saw the big picture and not... 351 00:26:52,840 --> 00:26:56,320 sort of like making a movie rather than just taking snapshots. 352 00:26:59,160 --> 00:27:02,440 In New York, Hunt had equipped himself 353 00:27:02,440 --> 00:27:06,480 with the tools he'd later need to make his greatest breakthrough. 354 00:27:08,360 --> 00:27:11,000 But as is so often the way in science, 355 00:27:11,000 --> 00:27:15,640 serendipity and chance encounters also played their part. 356 00:27:15,640 --> 00:27:19,720 About this time I went to a talk by a guy called John Gerhart, and very soon 357 00:27:19,720 --> 00:27:23,200 I was right on the edge of my seat because he was explaining his studies 358 00:27:23,200 --> 00:27:29,520 on MPF, maturation promoting factor, the magical missing link which seemed to be the trigger for cell division. 359 00:27:32,120 --> 00:27:38,000 For years, biologists had known that theoretically, something must make a cell divide. 360 00:27:38,000 --> 00:27:41,640 But try as they might, they couldn't find it. 361 00:27:41,640 --> 00:27:44,440 They had, however, given it a name. 362 00:27:46,720 --> 00:27:51,160 I think there's an interesting lesson to be learnt from MPF because 363 00:27:51,160 --> 00:27:53,200 when it was originally conceived 364 00:27:53,200 --> 00:27:56,640 it had a rather abstract nature. It was just factor... 365 00:27:56,640 --> 00:28:01,560 a factor that was present in cells that made other cells divide. 366 00:28:01,560 --> 00:28:04,280 But one had no idea quite what it was. 367 00:28:04,280 --> 00:28:10,920 And what you needed to do was to turn that abstraction into a physical reality and you do that by 368 00:28:10,920 --> 00:28:15,720 determining what molecules make it up. And science quite often inhabits that territory. 369 00:28:15,720 --> 00:28:18,920 You have an idea, an abstract thought about what's going on, 370 00:28:18,920 --> 00:28:21,560 but you have to turn it into something more concrete. 371 00:28:21,560 --> 00:28:24,440 It was nowhere near what I was working on at the time, 372 00:28:24,440 --> 00:28:27,040 but it struck me as a really delicious problem. 373 00:28:27,040 --> 00:28:29,120 You could almost taste it, within grasp. 374 00:28:29,120 --> 00:28:33,200 You could begin to think about what it was and how it might work. 375 00:28:40,120 --> 00:28:45,200 Hunt's interest in the stubbornly elusive MPF stayed with him. 376 00:28:45,200 --> 00:28:49,840 A decade later he was dividing his time between Cambridge and the US, 377 00:28:49,840 --> 00:28:52,720 looking at protein synthesis in cell division. 378 00:28:54,280 --> 00:28:56,880 Woods Hole is a famous marine biological laboratory 379 00:28:56,880 --> 00:29:00,560 at the seaside, near Boston. And that was in the summer of 1982. 380 00:29:00,560 --> 00:29:07,080 Alongside a friend, Eric Rosenthal, who was doing some experiments on clam eggs, and what we were 381 00:29:07,080 --> 00:29:13,240 doing was to try to compare the kinds of proteins made in clam eggs, before and after fertilisation. 382 00:29:13,240 --> 00:29:17,880 With Tim's help, Eric showed that the proteins that 383 00:29:17,880 --> 00:29:22,440 you make before you fertilise a clam egg and afterwards, are different. 384 00:29:22,440 --> 00:29:25,960 And there are three proteins that you make much more of after you've 385 00:29:25,960 --> 00:29:30,360 fertilised the egg, and they got the imaginative names A, B and C. 386 00:29:30,360 --> 00:29:37,240 And so when Eric would do experiments, in each experiment he always saw a lot of C. 387 00:29:37,240 --> 00:29:43,080 And in some experiments he saw a lot of A and B, and some experiments he saw almost none. 388 00:29:44,120 --> 00:29:49,160 So my friend had been taking snapshots, comparing the patterns of protein synthesis, 389 00:29:49,160 --> 00:29:54,440 and he noticed that sometimes the proteins were there and sometimes that they weren't. 390 00:29:58,760 --> 00:30:01,160 And it was just a complete mystery to me. 391 00:30:01,160 --> 00:30:04,400 Why would the proteins sometimes be there and sometimes not be? 392 00:30:06,040 --> 00:30:08,560 Normally, proteins would synthesise and stay there. 393 00:30:08,560 --> 00:30:11,560 They didn't just go away. I'd never seen anything like it. 394 00:30:11,560 --> 00:30:14,800 It was an intriguing problem. 395 00:30:14,800 --> 00:30:19,040 A problem whose solution might provide another piece of the MPF jigsaw, 396 00:30:19,040 --> 00:30:23,400 and one that Hunt was ideally placed to investigate. 397 00:30:23,400 --> 00:30:26,960 What you really needed was a movie to understand what was going on, 398 00:30:26,960 --> 00:30:30,400 very much the same kind of approach that I'd developed in New York. 399 00:30:32,680 --> 00:30:37,800 Eric never had the time or the inclination or, 400 00:30:37,800 --> 00:30:43,880 the desire to overcome the experimental difficulties, to take that leap and pursue that. 401 00:30:48,280 --> 00:30:51,760 And Tim saw something that he didn't expect to see, 402 00:30:51,760 --> 00:30:55,400 and then, in that situation, scientists have to make a decision. 403 00:30:55,400 --> 00:30:59,880 Do I stay narrowly focused on what I thought I was doing 404 00:30:59,880 --> 00:31:04,320 and just ignore this thing as being a will-o'-the-wisp, or do I realise 405 00:31:04,320 --> 00:31:08,200 that I've seen something that is much more important and pursue that? 406 00:31:14,440 --> 00:31:19,480 I started my own research on sea-urchin eggs to see if the same kind of things were happening. 407 00:31:19,480 --> 00:31:23,000 I just wanted to get to the bottom of it. 408 00:31:23,000 --> 00:31:26,720 The experiment was very, very simple. That's the important thing. 409 00:31:26,720 --> 00:31:30,280 So one day, and it turns out the experiment started at eight o'clock 410 00:31:30,280 --> 00:31:34,120 at night, and the others had all gone out dancing or drinking or something, 411 00:31:34,120 --> 00:31:38,440 so I was left all alone in the lab, it was just me and some sea-urchin eggs. 412 00:31:39,960 --> 00:31:45,360 And I checked they were fertilised, added the label, and then took out samples roughly every ten minutes. 413 00:31:49,720 --> 00:31:52,400 We just analysed the samples on something called 414 00:31:52,400 --> 00:31:56,800 an SDS polyacrylamide gel, which was very standard, 415 00:31:56,800 --> 00:32:00,880 and we knew exactly how to do and do it very beautifully, though I say so myself. 416 00:32:08,160 --> 00:32:13,000 I saw this protein which was actually the very first one whose synthesis you could just detect. 417 00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:17,760 And it got stronger and stronger and stronger, and then it faded away. 418 00:32:17,760 --> 00:32:21,840 All the other ones just went on getting stronger and stronger. 419 00:32:21,840 --> 00:32:25,800 I looked at it and thought, "Extraordinary!" The way the experiment was done 420 00:32:25,800 --> 00:32:30,040 there was no question that this protein going away must mean that it was being degraded 421 00:32:30,040 --> 00:32:31,880 and being degraded specifically. 422 00:32:31,880 --> 00:32:34,320 There was just this one protein went away. 423 00:32:34,320 --> 00:32:37,160 All the others behaved as you could have expected. 424 00:32:38,760 --> 00:32:44,400 Looking at the full picture in this way, taking samples over time, 425 00:32:44,400 --> 00:32:47,520 let me see that the protein wasn't coming and going randomly. 426 00:32:47,520 --> 00:32:51,560 It was coming and going in a very distinct cycle. 427 00:32:53,800 --> 00:32:55,840 I looked at this and... 428 00:32:55,840 --> 00:32:59,080 "Gosh!" you know? That's absolutely amazing. 429 00:33:01,280 --> 00:33:05,200 There it was, on this gel in black and white. 430 00:33:05,200 --> 00:33:07,440 Hunt called the protein cyclin 431 00:33:07,440 --> 00:33:10,200 because it came and went with the cell's cycle. 432 00:33:10,200 --> 00:33:13,320 He knew that what he was witnessing was significant, 433 00:33:13,320 --> 00:33:15,960 but he had no idea what it could mean. 434 00:33:19,240 --> 00:33:22,840 As it happened, I think I must have got the result on a Friday morning. 435 00:33:22,840 --> 00:33:25,320 On Friday evening I ran into John Gerhart 436 00:33:25,320 --> 00:33:29,280 at the wine and cheese party, after the Friday evening lecture. 437 00:33:29,280 --> 00:33:32,920 John was the man whose talk about MPF, the magical missing link, 438 00:33:32,920 --> 00:33:35,200 had excited me so much all those years ago. 439 00:33:35,200 --> 00:33:37,720 So suddenly, everything was coming full circle. 440 00:33:37,720 --> 00:33:40,120 This was the most exciting conversation, 441 00:33:40,120 --> 00:33:43,800 scientific conversation, of my entire life, I mean bar none. 442 00:33:43,800 --> 00:33:48,720 Extraordinary. I remember somebody came and tried to talk to me, I just brushed them off 443 00:33:48,720 --> 00:33:51,720 because this conversation I was having was so important 444 00:33:51,720 --> 00:33:55,040 to get it right. And it was absolutely the key. 445 00:33:55,040 --> 00:33:57,840 And so from that moment on, this is very unusual, 446 00:33:57,840 --> 00:34:02,920 the other things I've told you about, it often took weeks or months to figure out what was going on. 447 00:34:02,920 --> 00:34:09,480 But basically I'd seen this protein go away and I knew in my heart of hearts that somehow this was 448 00:34:09,480 --> 00:34:16,480 really important, and somehow deeply connected, intimately connected with the cell division control machinery. 449 00:34:16,480 --> 00:34:19,920 And it was something that nobody had ever, ever in their wildest 450 00:34:19,920 --> 00:34:24,840 imaginings thought of, that the protein might actually just go away. 451 00:34:24,840 --> 00:34:30,520 At the time that Tim discovered cyclin, it was sort of like the Northwest Passage. 452 00:34:30,520 --> 00:34:33,440 It's like knowing that the Northwest Passage exists 453 00:34:33,440 --> 00:34:37,160 but I can't point to it on a map and tell you exactly where it is. 454 00:34:37,160 --> 00:34:42,960 And so the search, if you like, is for that discovery of what is the molecule that is MPF? 455 00:34:42,960 --> 00:34:48,040 And so when Tim discovered cyclin there's immediately this congruence 456 00:34:48,040 --> 00:34:53,040 between, here's cyclin, a protein we have to make to get cells to divide. 457 00:34:53,040 --> 00:34:59,360 And here's MPF, something which pushes cells into the stage where they're just about to divide. 458 00:35:08,960 --> 00:35:11,920 Why did I have this sense 459 00:35:11,920 --> 00:35:16,880 that the going away of cyclin was intimately related to the control 460 00:35:16,880 --> 00:35:20,920 of the cell's cycle, and why did that explain so much, 461 00:35:20,920 --> 00:35:27,320 that I internally felt intuitively that it was probably the right answer? 462 00:35:27,320 --> 00:35:33,720 Although it had to be, you know... you had to nail it. You couldn't just take it for granted. 463 00:35:33,720 --> 00:35:38,960 And I'm not sure that I can give a very coherent, you know... 464 00:35:38,960 --> 00:35:41,360 Because it was more of a gut feeling. 465 00:35:45,480 --> 00:35:49,160 The truth of the matter is that I didn't dare hope that my cyclin, 466 00:35:49,160 --> 00:35:52,160 which was going up and down like a yo-yo, was part of MPF. 467 00:35:52,160 --> 00:35:54,640 That would have just been way too good to be true. 468 00:35:54,640 --> 00:35:59,920 That would have been like an instant Nobel Prize, and, you don't get instant Nobel Prizes 469 00:35:59,920 --> 00:36:05,120 just by doing one dumb-ass experiment on a Saturday morning, so to speak, you know? 470 00:36:06,560 --> 00:36:11,040 The excitement felt in Tim's circle at Woods Hole was not matched in the 471 00:36:11,040 --> 00:36:16,000 wider scientific community and Hunt was brought abruptly down to earth. 472 00:36:17,960 --> 00:36:20,880 People looked at me as though I was slightly deranged. 473 00:36:20,880 --> 00:36:22,680 I had quite a hard time. 474 00:36:22,680 --> 00:36:28,000 Indeed, when I sent off our first paper about this work to the journal Cell, the editor wrote back to me, 475 00:36:28,000 --> 00:36:34,640 "Dear Tim, the good news is we will publish your paper, but the bad news is in nothing like its present form." 476 00:36:34,640 --> 00:36:41,600 And one of the reviewers said, "It was wild speculation based on faulty logic". 477 00:36:41,600 --> 00:36:45,560 I can remember him ringing up and saying that he was... 478 00:36:45,560 --> 00:36:47,600 I can't remember what phrase he used, 479 00:36:47,600 --> 00:36:51,040 but he was essentially saying that he was 480 00:36:51,040 --> 00:36:54,760 tired of science and of research. 481 00:36:54,760 --> 00:36:59,600 Most people didn't have a problem with it seeming to have something to do with the cell cycle, 482 00:36:59,600 --> 00:37:06,160 but showing that it controlled the cell cycle was a much trickier thing to actually establish. 483 00:37:06,160 --> 00:37:12,160 He is a stickler for the world of people... 484 00:37:13,440 --> 00:37:15,760 ..peer recognition and all the rest of it. 485 00:37:15,760 --> 00:37:19,120 Well, his peers didn't recognise him, did they? 486 00:37:19,120 --> 00:37:23,560 They were just sceptical, and rightly so in a way, that, you know, I wasn't...I... 487 00:37:23,560 --> 00:37:27,240 Let's reserve judgment, put it that way, right? 488 00:37:27,240 --> 00:37:29,840 I think that's a perfectly legitimate thing to do. 489 00:37:29,840 --> 00:37:31,680 We had a lot of work to do and... 490 00:37:31,680 --> 00:37:34,600 I mean this was one of the funniest periods of my life. 491 00:37:34,600 --> 00:37:37,200 Little bit scary...good, because... 492 00:37:37,200 --> 00:37:43,480 because people were so sceptical nobody...nobody was still prepared to make that plunge themselves. 493 00:37:43,480 --> 00:37:45,920 Right? And that was... 494 00:37:45,920 --> 00:37:49,280 That was kind of... so it gave us a lot of space actually. 495 00:37:49,280 --> 00:37:52,000 Tim is not one of those arrogant scientists. 496 00:37:52,000 --> 00:37:54,280 He actually suffers a lot from self doubt. 497 00:37:54,280 --> 00:38:01,160 Often people are black and white, you know? This is right, this is wrong. Tim understands greyness. 498 00:38:01,160 --> 00:38:06,440 He understands that sometimes problems are not very clear and the best thing to do is talk about them. 499 00:38:06,440 --> 00:38:12,120 And these are features that mark out, in my view at least, a very good scientist. 500 00:38:16,360 --> 00:38:20,680 Hunt was faced with the daunting task of explaining exactly why 501 00:38:20,680 --> 00:38:25,920 the mercurial cyclin was in fact MPF, the stuff of life. 502 00:38:25,920 --> 00:38:28,720 His first instinct was to collaborate. 503 00:38:31,440 --> 00:38:37,080 Once you've got an idea, it's very good to bounce it off other people. 504 00:38:38,920 --> 00:38:41,800 You've got a result and you think it means this 505 00:38:41,800 --> 00:38:46,440 and you find your peers, your competition, the people who are actually working on this, 506 00:38:46,440 --> 00:38:49,720 and trying to sort of tease out as much as you possibly can 507 00:38:49,720 --> 00:38:55,560 to suck the data absolutely dry, right down to the bone, so that you can... 508 00:38:55,560 --> 00:39:01,120 So very interesting, the sort of the relationships with competitors. 509 00:39:01,120 --> 00:39:05,800 And...you know? I always found the best thing was to tell everybody everything. 510 00:39:09,240 --> 00:39:13,480 It was Hunt's spirit of openness that led to his fruitful collaboration 511 00:39:13,480 --> 00:39:19,200 with the man who would be instrumental in helping him complete the cyclin story. 512 00:39:19,200 --> 00:39:25,200 I'd been working on sort of genetic approaches to how the cell division cycle is regulated. 513 00:39:25,200 --> 00:39:29,520 I'd been doing that since the early to mid 1970s, 514 00:39:29,520 --> 00:39:34,920 and my work was abstract and I didn't have any idea about how 515 00:39:34,920 --> 00:39:39,840 the biochemistry, the chemical molecules that were involved, but I was very interested in that. 516 00:39:39,840 --> 00:39:43,160 And in the early '80s I was gradually getting 517 00:39:43,160 --> 00:39:47,800 towards getting towards looking at what molecules might be involved, using genetic approaches. 518 00:39:47,800 --> 00:39:53,000 And so I started to get very interested in other people's work, which might illuminate that. 519 00:39:53,000 --> 00:39:58,600 And I also was going to conferences and meetings where Tim was talking, 520 00:39:58,600 --> 00:40:02,800 and he was talking about this protein that was appearing and disappearing. 521 00:40:02,800 --> 00:40:08,000 So I obviously thought this could be, if luck was in the right place, 522 00:40:08,000 --> 00:40:13,360 this could be an element of the same sort of problem that I was interested in. 523 00:40:17,440 --> 00:40:21,720 If cyclin was to unlock the mystery of the magical MPF, 524 00:40:21,720 --> 00:40:25,760 it would be necessary to explain its precise role in cell division. 525 00:40:25,760 --> 00:40:29,280 What's more, it would need to be present in the dividing cells 526 00:40:29,280 --> 00:40:33,280 of all living things, not just a single species. 527 00:40:33,280 --> 00:40:38,160 Tim Hunt, Paul Nurse and their colleagues, set to work in earnest. 528 00:40:39,160 --> 00:40:42,600 We all knew each other and we all worked on different things. 529 00:40:42,600 --> 00:40:45,480 She worked on clams, he worked on yeast, 530 00:40:45,480 --> 00:40:51,440 I worked on frogs and sea urchins, and it was great and there was so much to be found out. 531 00:40:56,400 --> 00:40:59,720 The first thing, you see this in sea-urchin eggs, and you say, 532 00:40:59,720 --> 00:41:02,720 "OK, that's interesting. That's how sea urchins do it." 533 00:41:02,720 --> 00:41:06,080 Then you see it in clams, and that's pretty significant because 534 00:41:06,080 --> 00:41:10,280 clams and sea urchins, if you look at the tree of life, they're pretty far apart. 535 00:41:10,280 --> 00:41:16,520 So that suggests that it's at least in all sea creatures, molluscs and echinoderms. 536 00:41:16,520 --> 00:41:21,840 Now we're descended form echinoderms, so if echinoderms do it probably we do too. 537 00:41:25,520 --> 00:41:31,880 To go then from frogs and to try and make the MPF connection was really important. 538 00:41:34,440 --> 00:41:41,280 So once we knew it was there in frogs we could be utterly confident that it was going to be there in humans. 539 00:41:41,280 --> 00:41:44,480 And then it was clear that it was absolutely universal. 540 00:41:46,080 --> 00:41:52,920 This time there could be no doubting the veracity or the importance of their discovery. 541 00:41:52,920 --> 00:41:57,160 Every single animal, every single plant uses exactly the same 542 00:41:57,160 --> 00:42:01,640 fundamental mechanism to catalyse cell division. 543 00:42:01,640 --> 00:42:06,320 And by the time we knew all this, it became pretty much irrefutable. 544 00:42:21,560 --> 00:42:24,640 Suddenly, people...the scales fell from everybody's eyes 545 00:42:24,640 --> 00:42:29,240 and everybody realised that this was the secret and this was the basis of cell division. 546 00:42:35,160 --> 00:42:39,640 One of the greatest mysteries in biology had been solved. 547 00:42:39,640 --> 00:42:44,120 The continued existence of all life on earth could now be explained. 548 00:42:44,120 --> 00:42:47,400 Cell division was no longer governed by theoretical construct, 549 00:42:47,400 --> 00:42:50,800 but by real chemicals on a real protein 550 00:42:50,800 --> 00:42:55,680 called cyclin, discovered in a sea urchin by Tim Hunt. 551 00:42:55,680 --> 00:42:59,920 Now, the scientific establishment beat a path to his door. 552 00:43:10,160 --> 00:43:13,040 The Nobel Prize is the only scientific prize 553 00:43:13,040 --> 00:43:16,000 that the public generally know about, so it is iconic. 554 00:43:16,000 --> 00:43:21,280 I mean there are quite a few other prizes which sort of lead up to it and... 555 00:43:21,280 --> 00:43:23,720 But it's the Nobel Prize that really matters. 556 00:43:23,720 --> 00:43:27,280 Tim phoned me and he had to come down to London from his lab 557 00:43:27,280 --> 00:43:29,760 for a press conference with Paul Nurse. 558 00:43:29,760 --> 00:43:33,040 So he'd dropped by my office and he looked like he'd been in 559 00:43:33,040 --> 00:43:36,760 a road accident, he was in shock I would say, very pale, very shaky. 560 00:43:36,760 --> 00:43:42,760 And we went to tell Celia at that point, who was at primary school and sort of old enough to understand. 561 00:43:42,760 --> 00:43:47,680 The head teacher said when we got to the door we looked like we'd been in an accident, basically. 562 00:43:47,680 --> 00:43:50,400 We're going, "Won the Nobel Prize, what shall we do?" 563 00:43:50,400 --> 00:43:52,400 And Tim really didn't believe it. 564 00:43:52,400 --> 00:43:57,000 He almost thought that somebody... that it was a spoof, although I think he had talked 565 00:43:57,000 --> 00:43:59,480 directly to the Swedes, whereas I had not. 566 00:43:59,480 --> 00:44:02,920 I said, "People wouldn't be so cruel, Tim, certainly not to you." 567 00:44:02,920 --> 00:44:08,400 Until the King had actually given me this bloody medal, I really thought that somebody might come in and... 568 00:44:08,400 --> 00:44:11,040 "No, sorry, made a ghastly mistake." 569 00:44:12,800 --> 00:44:14,280 Dr Hartwell, 570 00:44:14,280 --> 00:44:18,440 Dr Hunt and Dr Nurse. 571 00:44:18,440 --> 00:44:21,960 Your fundamental discoveries have profoundly increased 572 00:44:21,960 --> 00:44:26,080 our understanding of how the cell cycle is controlled. 573 00:44:26,080 --> 00:44:30,400 This new knowledge has a huge impact on cell biology 574 00:44:30,400 --> 00:44:35,600 with broad applications in many fields of biology and medicine. 575 00:44:35,600 --> 00:44:39,920 It's very moving because you know this is the pinnacle of your scientific career. 576 00:44:39,920 --> 00:44:46,680 And I now ask you to step forward to receive the Nobel Prize from the hands of his majesty, the King. 577 00:44:52,000 --> 00:44:56,040 APPLAUSE 578 00:45:06,120 --> 00:45:09,080 Oh, yeah, I still feel enormously proud. 579 00:45:09,080 --> 00:45:10,640 Hugely so. 580 00:45:19,960 --> 00:45:25,160 I think the Nobel Prize rewards significant achievements in science, 581 00:45:25,160 --> 00:45:29,160 which are of importance for science as a whole. 582 00:45:29,160 --> 00:45:34,320 And the Nobel Prize is really about rewarding things which become 583 00:45:34,320 --> 00:45:37,920 foundational parts of conventional science. 584 00:45:37,920 --> 00:45:43,440 The key discoveries that are the foundations of established science, 585 00:45:43,440 --> 00:45:47,320 and discovering the way that cell division works 586 00:45:47,320 --> 00:45:51,400 is a key discovery in history, in the history of biology, 587 00:45:51,400 --> 00:45:55,600 and I think that's why Tim's Nobel Prize was a Nobel Prize. 588 00:45:57,280 --> 00:46:02,720 There are always these pioneers who work things out and who had the idea first, 589 00:46:02,720 --> 00:46:07,240 and I think it's absolutely fine to honour those people actually. 590 00:46:07,240 --> 00:46:12,520 I mean if you look at the list of biological Nobel Prize winners, 591 00:46:12,520 --> 00:46:18,680 it really is a sort of, a role call of major discoveries down the last hundred odd years. 592 00:46:19,680 --> 00:46:23,480 The question that I always ask when I'm trying to understand science, 593 00:46:23,480 --> 00:46:26,000 "Why did they know that and they don't know this?" 594 00:46:26,000 --> 00:46:29,920 If you go back to the history you say, "We know this because we were working on that. 595 00:46:29,920 --> 00:46:33,040 "And we accidentally found that and then that led to..." 596 00:46:33,040 --> 00:46:38,880 There is a sort of thread running through it, kind of continuity of ideas. 597 00:46:38,880 --> 00:46:42,000 If you like, it's all just this gradual 598 00:46:42,000 --> 00:46:48,160 opening of a flower, an intellectual flower that takes you from the golden age of molecular biology, 599 00:46:48,160 --> 00:46:53,720 through worrying about how you make proteins, to discovering the protein that controls cell division. 600 00:46:53,720 --> 00:46:57,240 I think one of the things that's so fantastic about all the fame and, 601 00:46:57,240 --> 00:47:02,160 publicity that accompanies things like getting the Nobel Prize 602 00:47:02,160 --> 00:47:07,160 is that lots of the people who go there, nice or not, 603 00:47:07,160 --> 00:47:11,520 are people who are just unbelievably ambitious. 604 00:47:11,520 --> 00:47:15,240 And Tim certainly, like most scientists, is competitive. 605 00:47:15,240 --> 00:47:18,360 He wants to do things that are important. 606 00:47:18,360 --> 00:47:24,040 But he's really a scientists' scientist in a way that I think we've a little bit lost a sort of 607 00:47:24,040 --> 00:47:30,680 almost 19th-century tradition of the independently wealthy gentlemen who does things just cos it's fun. 608 00:47:30,680 --> 00:47:36,400 And I think Tim's spirit of fun and generosity and excitement about science 609 00:47:36,400 --> 00:47:43,080 as little contaminated by personal ambition as it is in him, makes him such a remarkable person. 610 00:47:45,520 --> 00:47:50,240 I have here his Nobel medal, which he kindly gave to the College 611 00:47:50,240 --> 00:47:53,040 because he thought it would be locked up in a bank, 612 00:47:53,040 --> 00:47:56,280 but if it's in Clare College at least it would be seen. 613 00:47:56,280 --> 00:47:58,640 He's that sort of man. Very generous. 614 00:47:58,640 --> 00:48:03,080 And we miss him here because when he moved onto greater things, 615 00:48:03,080 --> 00:48:07,760 of course we lost him, but he was always the life and soul of the party, 616 00:48:07,760 --> 00:48:11,240 always good for a laugh, cheered us all up. 617 00:48:11,240 --> 00:48:12,760 In fact, still miss him. 618 00:48:12,760 --> 00:48:15,400 I love to see him when he comes here. 619 00:48:15,400 --> 00:48:18,680 He still comes on a regular basis, but not enough for me. 620 00:48:24,720 --> 00:48:28,800 Today, Tim Hunt works for Cancer Research UK. 621 00:48:30,400 --> 00:48:33,600 It was a move that had a special poignancy for him. 622 00:48:33,600 --> 00:48:39,160 Before he was awarded his Nobel Prize, his mother had been diagnosed with the disease. 623 00:48:46,560 --> 00:48:50,560 I got this postcard from her and it said, 624 00:48:50,560 --> 00:48:55,360 "Had lovely holiday in Scotland, but ate poisonous mushroom." 625 00:48:55,360 --> 00:49:00,920 It wasn't the poisonous mushroom, it was the fact that her liver was already just one horrible mass 626 00:49:00,920 --> 00:49:06,160 and had stopped working, basically. That's what was upsetting her. It took a little while before... 627 00:49:06,160 --> 00:49:07,760 She was very funny about it. 628 00:49:07,760 --> 00:49:11,960 They took her down to some X-ray machine and the young intern 629 00:49:11,960 --> 00:49:16,320 took one look at her X-ray and said, "Oh, my God!" 630 00:49:16,320 --> 00:49:19,160 And she'd trained as a physiotherapist, and she knew 631 00:49:19,160 --> 00:49:24,160 what hospital life was like, and it amused her very much that he behaved so badly. 632 00:49:24,160 --> 00:49:27,600 I mean this is absolutely not what you do in front of a patient. 633 00:49:27,600 --> 00:49:31,560 But she was funny like that about... very funny about herself. 634 00:49:32,600 --> 00:49:35,880 The cancer had, by this time, turned into something called ascites, 635 00:49:35,880 --> 00:49:38,240 free-living cancer cells in her belly. 636 00:49:38,240 --> 00:49:41,560 I tried to read... I knew nothing about cancer at that point. 637 00:49:41,560 --> 00:49:46,680 How can it be that these cancer cells are actually sucking the goodness out of her good tissues? 638 00:49:46,680 --> 00:49:53,280 And why is it the muscles waste away and her brain was as sharp as anything, right to the end? 639 00:49:53,280 --> 00:49:59,400 I mean, there was no sign of mental deterioration whatsoever, it's just her body was failing. 640 00:49:59,400 --> 00:50:03,240 I mean, as a scientist, that really fascinated me 641 00:50:03,240 --> 00:50:07,720 and I longed, and I have ever since that day, longed to work on that. 642 00:50:11,000 --> 00:50:17,360 It was announced in October, or something like that, and she was dead just before Christmas. 643 00:50:17,360 --> 00:50:21,720 One time, she came into the room and said, "I want you to know, I'm not afraid of dying." 644 00:50:36,240 --> 00:50:42,240 After I'd heard that I won the Nobel Prize it was a very... you know...you sort of... 645 00:50:42,240 --> 00:50:45,440 It's hard to describe the emotions that go through your mind. 646 00:50:45,440 --> 00:50:50,960 But one of them was I was just driving out along... you know, just coming in... 647 00:50:50,960 --> 00:50:53,440 Oh, God, what's it called? 648 00:50:53,440 --> 00:50:55,880 Along the Finchley Road basically, the A41, 649 00:50:55,880 --> 00:51:02,000 and suddenly tears welled up in my eyes because I thought how proud my parents would have been. 650 00:51:02,000 --> 00:51:06,800 And it was, it was really sort of awful actually, weird, I mean just weird. 651 00:51:15,120 --> 00:51:19,040 I was very thrilled when the opportunity came to work in a cancer institute. 652 00:51:19,040 --> 00:51:23,680 Because of my mum and partly because I think it's just a very, very interesting problem, 653 00:51:23,680 --> 00:51:28,520 and partly because an awful lot of people die of it. 654 00:51:28,520 --> 00:51:34,080 I mean understanding how the cell cycle works does kind of inform aspects of cancer research, but it... 655 00:51:34,080 --> 00:51:41,880 As I often say, if I did discover a cure for even one cancer, nobody would be more thrilled than me. 656 00:51:41,880 --> 00:51:47,240 But it's not what motivates me, for one. I mean, you know... 657 00:51:47,240 --> 00:51:50,480 I just want to try and understand what the hell is going on. 658 00:51:51,760 --> 00:51:57,600 Cancer is characterised by cells dividing out of control, but understanding why they do 659 00:51:57,600 --> 00:52:01,080 is a problem that has resisted solution for over 50 years. 660 00:52:01,080 --> 00:52:06,720 The time has come in America to turn toward conquering this dread disease. 661 00:52:09,800 --> 00:52:15,560 It is perhaps the last great battle that modern medicine has to wage. 662 00:52:15,560 --> 00:52:20,560 The time has come in America when the same kind of 663 00:52:20,560 --> 00:52:24,840 concentrated effort that split the atom and took man to the moon 664 00:52:24,840 --> 00:52:28,280 should be turned toward conquering this dread disease. 665 00:52:30,400 --> 00:52:34,960 But it's not just an issue of funding and political will. 666 00:52:36,200 --> 00:52:41,280 I think that we are still remarkably poor 667 00:52:41,280 --> 00:52:45,600 at dealing with cancer, and so when I teach students about it 668 00:52:45,600 --> 00:52:50,600 I draw the analogy between John Kennedy 669 00:52:50,600 --> 00:52:53,560 declaring that Americans will put people on the moon. 670 00:52:53,560 --> 00:52:58,880 And I say exactly how long it took and how much money it cost, which was a lot. 671 00:52:58,880 --> 00:53:02,800 And then Richard Nixon, declaring war on cancer. 672 00:53:02,800 --> 00:53:08,880 And so he set out, as a public aim, defeating cancer 673 00:53:08,880 --> 00:53:13,560 and we've had more than 30, probably approaching 40 years, since then. 674 00:53:16,240 --> 00:53:21,680 And when I talk about that I say, putting people on the moon required 19th century, 675 00:53:21,680 --> 00:53:25,560 or actually even earlier physics, right? Basically, Newtonian physics. 676 00:53:25,560 --> 00:53:28,200 An engineering challenge, not a scientific challenge. 677 00:53:28,200 --> 00:53:31,640 The problem with cancer is it's a scientific challenge, right? 678 00:53:31,640 --> 00:53:34,680 We don't understand exactly what cancer is. 679 00:53:34,680 --> 00:53:39,360 Knowing the molecules that control cell division helps us a little. 680 00:53:41,200 --> 00:53:46,000 If anyone can make headway in the defeat of cancer, it's Tim Hunt. 681 00:53:46,000 --> 00:53:50,240 Not because he is better funded or has a superior work ethic than 682 00:53:50,240 --> 00:53:57,480 his fellow scientists, but simply because of his undiminished thirst for discovering how things work. 683 00:53:57,480 --> 00:54:02,160 Quite often it happens that problems get solved out of left-field by people just coming at it 684 00:54:02,160 --> 00:54:07,520 a different way. Very rarely happens that biological problems are solved by a direct, frontal attack. 685 00:54:10,480 --> 00:54:16,160 Tim Hunt's career is, in many ways, typical of the 21st century scientist. 686 00:54:16,160 --> 00:54:18,800 A rarefied world of research institutes 687 00:54:18,800 --> 00:54:25,440 and searching peer reviews, of academic conferences and sparking ideas off fellow scientists. 688 00:54:27,760 --> 00:54:34,080 But there is a particular cast of mind that can go beyond even the most cutting-edge science. 689 00:54:37,120 --> 00:54:40,320 There are two sorts of scientists. 690 00:54:40,320 --> 00:54:43,520 There are people who are really interested in big ideas 691 00:54:43,520 --> 00:54:47,800 and experiments, to them, are simply a means to big ideas. 692 00:54:47,800 --> 00:54:50,440 The big thinkers, the speculators, 693 00:54:50,440 --> 00:54:55,360 you know, experiments, unpleasant means to an end, often. 694 00:54:55,360 --> 00:54:59,360 And then there's another class of scientist who just like to fiddle, 695 00:54:59,360 --> 00:55:05,080 to tinker. And to many of those people, speculation is anathema. 696 00:55:05,080 --> 00:55:09,440 It means going beyond your data in a sense, going somewhere where almost 697 00:55:09,440 --> 00:55:11,600 emotionally you're not supposed to go. 698 00:55:11,600 --> 00:55:17,000 And what, to me, is unique about Tim is he's both of those people. 699 00:55:27,440 --> 00:55:29,880 I think that my main talent is sort of spotting 700 00:55:29,880 --> 00:55:33,200 funny little things that don't quite make sense and that, 701 00:55:33,200 --> 00:55:35,920 you know... 702 00:55:35,920 --> 00:55:40,400 Isaac Newton talked about shiny pebbles on the beach, like a little boy 703 00:55:40,400 --> 00:55:44,320 wandering around seeing shiny... looking for shiny pebbles on the beach. 704 00:55:44,320 --> 00:55:49,880 I'm quite good at looking for shiny pebbles and seeing things which aren't actually on the mainstream 705 00:55:49,880 --> 00:55:55,440 but which lead you off in a new direction and are incredibly illuminating about what's going on. 706 00:55:55,440 --> 00:55:58,560 I mean, in other words, I'm a good discoverer of things. 707 00:56:08,200 --> 00:56:10,720 Discovering things is the most fun, I think. 708 00:56:10,720 --> 00:56:17,280 Because they tend to, sort of illuminate whole fields in a way that you couldn't believe. 709 00:56:17,280 --> 00:56:21,280 One moment you're ignorant and the next moment you get that little tiny, 710 00:56:21,280 --> 00:56:28,560 tiny clue that sort of sheds an enormous amount of light on the whole thing. 711 00:56:35,840 --> 00:56:43,000 It's not up to me, I don't think, to decide whether my mind is beautiful or not. 712 00:56:43,000 --> 00:56:46,760 But it's my mind and it's taken me to some exciting places 713 00:56:46,760 --> 00:56:49,280 and answered some very interesting questions 714 00:56:49,280 --> 00:56:52,640 and it's given me a lot of fun, and for that, I'm very grateful. 715 00:57:16,800 --> 00:57:19,880 Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd 716 00:57:19,880 --> 00:57:22,840 E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk