Health
Related: About this forumSome of My Best Friends Are Germs
I can tell you the exact date that I began to think of myself in the first-person plural as a superorganism, that is, rather than a plain old individual human being. It happened on March 7. Thats when I opened my e-mail to find a huge, processor-choking file of charts and raw data from a laboratory located at the BioFrontiers Institute at the University of Colorado, Boulder. As part of a new citizen-science initiative called the American Gut project, the lab sequenced my microbiome that is, the genes not of me, exactly, but of the several hundred microbial species with whom I share this body. These bacteria, which number around 100 trillion, are living (and dying) right now on the surface of my skin, on my tongue and deep in the coils of my intestines, where the largest contingent of them will be found, a pound or two of microbes together forming a vast, largely uncharted interior wilderness that scientists are just beginning to map.
I clicked open a file called Taxa Tables, and a colorful bar chart popped up on my screen. Each bar represented a sample taken (with a swab) from my skin, mouth and feces. For purposes of comparison, these were juxtaposed with bars representing the microbiomes of about 100 average Americans previously sequenced.
Here were the names of the hundreds of bacterial species that call me home. In sheer numbers, these microbes and their genes dwarf us. It turns out that we are only 10 percent human: for every human cell that is intrinsic to our body, there are about 10 resident microbes including commensals (generally harmless freeloaders) and mutualists (favor traders) and, in only a tiny number of cases, pathogens. To the extent that we are bearers of genetic information, more than 99 percent of it is microbial. And it appears increasingly likely that this second genome, as it is sometimes called, exerts an influence on our health as great and possibly even greater than the genes we inherit from our parents. But while your inherited genes are more or less fixed, it may be possible to reshape, even cultivate, your second genome.
Justin Sonnenburg, a microbiologist at Stanford, suggests that we would do well to begin regarding the human body as an elaborate vessel optimized for the growth and spread of our microbial inhabitants. This humbling new way of thinking about the self has large implications for human and microbial health, which turn out to be inextricably linked. Disorders in our internal ecosystem a loss of diversity, say, or a proliferation of the wrong kind of microbes may predispose us to obesity and a whole range of chronic diseases, as well as some infections. Fecal transplants, which involve installing a healthy persons microbiota into a sick persons gut, have been shown to effectively treat an antibiotic-resistant intestinal pathogen named C. difficile, which kills 14,000 Americans each year. (Researchers use the word microbiota to refer to all the microbes in a community and microbiome to refer to their collective genes.) Weve known for a few years that obese mice transplanted with the intestinal community of lean mice lose weight and vice versa. (We dont know why.) A similar experiment was performed recently on humans by researchers in the Netherlands: when the contents of a lean donors microbiota were transferred to the guts of male patients with metabolic syndrome, the researchers found striking improvements in the recipients sensitivity to insulin, an important marker for metabolic health. Somehow, the gut microbes were influencing the patients metabolisms.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/19/magazine/say-hello-to-the-100-trillion-bacteria-that-make-up-your-microbiome.html?pagewanted=all&_r=1&
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