The Human Microbiome -- Eric R. Pianka
The Human Microbiome
© Eric R. Pianka
You are composed of about 100 trillion cells, but only 10 trillion are your own cells. Most of
the other 90 trillion are bacteria, with a few other parasites, fungi, and nifty other little
creatures, mixed in. The eyebrow mite Demodex folliculorum lives in your bushy eyebrow
forests and burrows into eyebrow hair follicles (Buckman 2003) but causes little harm. Your
health depends on many of these commensals. Some can cause cancers, others lead to allergies,
asthma, diabetes, and obesity, and still others control appetite and enhance or inhibit immune
function. Some of our contingent of microbes affect neurotransmitters and hence brain function
as well as contribute to our moods and general sense of well being.
As many as ten thousand different species of bacteria exploit our bodies as favorable
environmental substrates, one of the most important being the coliform human gut bacterium
Escherichia coli, named for where they live: in our colons. Each of us houses 6 billion
of these tiny commensal microbes, almost as many bacteria as there are people on planet Earth.
They are not parasites but without them in our intestines, other less benevolent parasitic
bacteria like Salmonella invade. When you lose your E. coli population, say by
taking antibiotics, you get diarrhea. E. coli are vital to our well being because
they keep our guts functional. Antibiotics can save lives but they also can also cause
collateral damage by taking out beneficial gut bacteria. Indeed our good bacteria may well
act as living antibiotics that protect us from harmful microbes. Many modern ailments,
including allergies, diabetes, and obesity, are now thought to stem from incomplete microbiomes
that have been reduced by antibiotics. When prescribing antibiotics, many doctors also
recommend that patients take probiotics to replenish their intestinal microbiome. Yogurt
sells because it acts in the same way. However, not enough is yet known to make specific
predictions, let alone take action.
Of the thousands of bacterial species in our intestines, some, such as Helicobacter pylori,
causes stomach ulcers and stomach and colon cancers in older people (Lampe 2008) but can also
be beneficial at early ages. Children with H. pylori are much less likely to develop asthma
than those who do not carry the bacterium. H. pylori also interacts with stomach hormones
that influence appetite, and people without this bacterium are much more prone to overeating and
obesity than those with H. pylori. However, as we age, this same bacterium can cause
stomach ulcers and stomach cancers. Once, medical people wanted to eliminate H. pylori
entirely whereas now the thinking is that its net effect is beneficial for young people but
detrimental in adults. Ultimately, we may want to manage our microbiome populations in different
ways as we age.
Before birth, babies live in a semi-sterile womb and have little or no microbiome -- during
passage through a mother's birth canal, babies begin to acquire bacteria. Babies delivered by
Caeserean section lack many microbes normally transferred from mother to child and are more
likely to develop allergies and asthma than vaginally-birthed babies (Specter 2012). A friend
of mine attributes his good teeth to his first kiss from his mother who inoculated his oral
cavity with her own mouth's microorganisms. By the time a kid can crawl, he/she has been
exposed to many trillion microbes, mostly bacteria, but also viruses and fungi (including
yeasts). Although they are tiny, when added together, your 90 trillion cell microbiome weighs
three pounds (as much as your brain!). Carrying around those extra three pounds is vital to
your continued healthy existence.
Our microbiome commensals work constantly on our behalf, manufacturing vitamins, bolstering
our immune systems, assisting in digestion, and preventing sinusitis and other infections.
Bacteria even alter our brain chemistry thus affecting our moods and behavior. Some bacteria
affect insulin resistance, others high blood pressure, irritable bowel syndrome, tooth decay,
asthma and obesity.
A guy with a chronic ear infection once cured himself by simply transferring some earwax from
his good ear to his bad one, presumably moving beneficial bacteria in the process (Specter 2012).
A healthy person's sinuses harbor 1200 bacterial species, whereas someone with sinusitis has
only 900 different strains. Those missing 300 species could be protecting against noxious
microbes. All animals have their own unique microbiomes -- domesticated food animals fed
antibiotics often gain weight just as people with diminished microbiomes become obese. Because
of its implications for human health, the human microbiome has become the subject of intense
study by the National Institute of Health. Interestingly, microbiomes of males differ from
those in females (Bolnick et al. 2014). People can be classified into different enterotypes.
This finding could lead to replacement treatments to restore missing bacteria and might even
provide treatments for allergies, asthma, obesity, and tooth decay. The Human Microbiome
Project has called for systematic fecal samples from many individuals to evaluate interindividual
differences in gut microbial communities (Lampe 2008).
About ten percent of us harbor Clostridium difficile, which is normally held in check
by other residents of the gut. When these companion bacteria are destroyed by antibiotics,
C. difficile can erupt causing severe diarrhea and intestinal inflammatory disease.
In extreme cases, destruction of the microbiome is so severe that doctors have had to resort
to fecal transplants from healthy donors to re-innoculate the intestines of people whose
microbiomes have become incomplete.
Darwin suggested the appendix, a pouch off the human large bowel, is a vestigial organ. When
it becomes inflamed with a bacterial infection, appendicitis can be life threatening -- some
surgeons remove the appendix as a normal proactive procedure whenever a patient's body cavity
is opened up. Recently, however, Bollinger et al. (2007) have suggested the appendix could
have an adaptive function serving as a "safe house" (a sort of "bomb shelter") for our commensal bacteria,
facilitating recolonization of the colon by beneficial bacteria following exposure to antibiotics
or pathogens.
References
Bollinger, R R, A S Barbas, E L Bush, S S Lin, and W Parker. 2007. Biofilms in the large bowel
suggest an apparent function of the human vermiform appendix. Journal of Theoretical Biology 249:826-831.
Bolnick, D I, L K Snowberg, P E Hirsch, L Christian, C L Lauber, E Org, B Parks, A J Lusis,
R Knight, J G Caporaso, and R Svanba ̈ck. 2014. Individual diet has sex-dependent effects on
vertebrate gut microbiota. Nature Communications |5:4500 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5500 | 1-13.
Buckman, R. 2003. Human Wildlife: The Life that Lives on Us: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Lampe, J W. 2008. The Human Microbiome Project: Getting to the Guts of the Matter in Cancer
Epidemiology. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 17 (October 2008): 2523-2524.
Specter, M. 2012. Germs are Us: Bacteria make us sick. Do they also keep us alive? New Yorker
(October 2012): 32-39.
Yong, E. 2016. I Contain multitudes. HarperCollins.
Last updated 7 August 2014 by Eric R. Pianka
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