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100 Trillion Bacteria: Humans are More Environments than Organisms

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Home › Forum Online Discussion › Philosophy › 100 Trillion Bacteria: Humans are More Environments than Organisms

  • This topic has 5 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 4 months ago by Michael Winn.
Viewing 6 posts - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
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  • December 13, 2009 at 12:00 am #32800
    Michael Winn
    Keymaster

    note: this is a point I often raise in my sun-moon-earth alchemy/Greater Kan Li course: the planetary mass is five-sixths dead bacteria, and human’s are ecosystems that mimic that…..

    THE BODY POLITIC

    By Courtney Humphries
    Seed Magazine
    April 14, 2009

    http://seedmagazine.com/content/print/the_body_politic/

    The deep symbiosis between bacteria and their human hosts is forcing
    scientists to ask: Are we organisms or living ecosystems?

    …………..

    As soon as we are born, bacteria move in. They stake claims in our digestive
    and respiratory tracts, our teeth, our skin. They establish increasingly
    complex communities, like a forest that gradually takes over a clearing. By
    the time were a few years old, these communities have matured, and we carry
    them with us, more or less, for our entire lives. Our bodies harbor 100
    trillion bacterial cells, outnumbering our human cells 10 to one. Its easy
    to ignore this astonishing fact. Bacteria are tiny in comparison to human
    cells; they contribute just a few pounds to our weight and remain invisible
    to us.

    Its also been easy for science to overlook their role in our bodies and our
    health. Researchers have largely concerned themselves with bacterias
    negative role as pathogens: The devastating effects of a handful of
    infectious organisms have always seemed more urgent than what has been
    considered a benign and relatively unimportant relationship with good
    bacteria. In the intestine, the bacterial hub of the body that teems with
    trillions of microbes, they have traditionally been called commensal
    organisms–literally, eating at the same table. The moniker suggests that
    while weve known for decades that gut bacteria help digestion and prevent
    infections, they are little more than ever-present dinner guests.

    But theres a growing consensus among scientists that the relationship
    between us and our microbes is much more of a two-way street. With new
    technologies that allow scientists to better identify and study the
    organisms that live in and on us, weve become aware that bacteria, though
    tiny, are powerful chemical factories that fundamentally affect how the
    human body functions. They are not simply random squatters, but organized
    communities that evolve with us and are passed down from generation to
    generation. Through research that has blurred the boundary between medical
    and environmental microbiology, were beginning to understand that because
    the human body constitutes their environment, these microbial communities
    have been forced to adapt to changes in our diets, health, and lifestyle
    choices. Yet they, in turn, are also part of our environments, and our
    bodies have adapted to them. Our dinner guests, it seems, have shaped the
    very path of human evolution.

    In October, researchers in several countries launched the International
    Human Microbiome Consortium, an effort to characterize the role of microbes
    in the human body. Just over a year ago, the National Institutes of Health
    also launched its own Human Microbiome Project. These new efforts represent
    a formal recognition of bacterias far-reaching influence, including their
    contributions to human health and certain illnesses. This could be the basis
    of a whole new way of looking at disease, said microbiologist Margaret
    McFall-Ngai at the 108th General Meeting of the American Society for
    Microbiology in Boston last June. But the emerging science of human-microbe
    symbiosis has an even greater implication. Human beings are not really
    individuals; theyre communities of organisms, says McFall-Ngai. Its not just
    that our bodies serve as a habitat for other organisms; its also that we
    function with them as a collective. As the profound interrelationship
    between humans and microbes becomes more apparent, the distinction between
    host and hosted has become both less clear and less important–together we
    operate as a constantly evolving man-microbe kibbutz. Which raises a
    startling implication: If being Homo sapiens through and through implied a
    certain authority over our corporeal selves, we are now forced to relinquish
    some of that control to our inner-dwelling microbes. Ironically, the human
    ingenuity that drives us to understand more about ourselves is revealing
    that were much less human than we once thought.

    To find a biological answer to the question Who are we? we might look to the
    human genome. Certainly, when the Human Genome Project first produced a
    draft of the 3 billion-base-pair sequence, it was touted as a blueprint for
    human life. Less than a decade later, however, most experts recognize that
    our genomes capture only a part of who we are. Researchers have become
    aware, for example, of the influence of epigenetic phenomena–imprinting,
    maternal effects, and gene silencing, among others–in determining how
    genetic material is ultimately expressed. Now comes the notion that the
    genomes of microbes within us must also be considered. Our bodies are, after
    all, composites of human and bacterial cells, with microbes together
    contributing at least 1,000 times more genes to the whole. As we discover
    more and more roles that microbes play, it has become impossible to ignore
    the contribution of bacteria to the pool of genes we define as ourselves.
    Indeed, several scientists have begun to refer to the human body as a
    superorganism whose complexity extends far beyond what is encoded in a
    single genome.

    The physiology of a superorganism would likely look very different from
    traditional human physiology. There has been a great deal of research into
    the dynamics of communities among plants, insect colonies, and even in human
    society. What new insights could we gain by applying some of that knowledge
    to the workings of communities in our own bodies? Certain body functions
    could be the result of negotiations between several partners, and diseases
    the result of small changes in group dynamics–or of a breakdown in
    communication between symbiotic partners.

    Recently, for instance, evidence has surfaced that obesity may well include
    a microbial component. In ongoing work that is part of the Human Microbiome
    Project, researchers in Jeffrey Gordons lab at the Washington University
    School of Medicine in St. Louis showed that lean and obese mice have
    different proportions of microbes in their digestive systems. Bacteria in
    the plumper rodents, it seemed, were better able to extract energy from
    food, because when these bacteria were transferred into lean mice, the mice
    gained weight. The same is apparently true for humans: In December Gordons
    team published findings that lean and obese twins–whether identical or
    fraternal–harbor strikingly different bacterial communities. And these
    bacteria, they discovered, are not just helping to process food directly;
    they actually influence whether that energy is ultimately stored as fat in
    the body.

    Even confined in their designated body parts, microbes exert their effects
    by churning out chemical signals for our cells to receive. Jeremy Nicholson,
    a chemist at Imperial College of London, has become a champion of the idea
    that the extent of this microbial signaling goes vastly underappreciated.
    Nicholson had been looking at the metabolites in human blood and urine with
    the hope of developing personalized drugs when he found that our bodily
    fluids are filled with metabolites produced by our intestinal bacteria. He
    now believes that the influence of gut microbes ranges from the ways in
    which we metabolize drugs and food to the subtle workings of our brain
    chemistry.

    Scientists originally expected that the communication between animals and
    their symbiotic bacteria would form its own molecular language. But
    McFall-Ngai, an expert on animal-microbe symbiosis, says that she and other
    scientists have instead found beneficial relationships involving some of the
    same chemical messages that had been discovered previously in pathogens.
    Many bacterial products that had been termed virulence factors or toxins
    turn out to not be inherently offensive signals; they are just part of the
    conversation between microbe and host. The difference between our
    interaction with harmful and helpful bacteria, she says, is not so much like
    separate languages as it is a change in tone: Its the difference between an
    argument and a civil conversation. We are in constant communication with our
    microbes, and the messages are broadcast throughout the human body.

    The first study of a microbial community living on the human body was made
    back in 1683, when Antony van Leeuwenhoek wrote a letter to the Royal
    Society including his observations through the microscope of his own dental
    plaque, in which he described seeing many very little living animalcules,
    very prettily a-moving. But despite this very early interest in the microbe
    communities on the body, over the next three centuries, microbiologists
    focused mainly on isolating bacteria: removing them from their natural
    contexts and growing them in culture dishes in the lab. This approach was
    the only way to observe and understand bacterial cells in great detail. But
    it also created huge gaps in knowledge about bacterial life. It focused on
    the fraction of microorganisms that can be grown in culture, and it
    overlooked the highly complex and diverse ways in which they actually live
    together–an approach akin to studying humans by confining them in prison
    cells while ignoring the cities and communities that make up their natural
    habitat.

    This narrow view of microorganisms began to change when new genetic
    sequencing technologies–which fished the genes directly out of water or
    soil samples–made it possible to collect information about microorganisms
    without having to isolate them. These studies revealed an incredible amount
    of genetic abundance and diversity; the microbial world was a far bigger and
    denser landscape than anyone had previously known. A further leap in
    technology has been the ability to sequence large numbers of genes rapidly.
    Even without seeing the organisms themselves, scientists can now sequence
    tens or hundreds of thousands of genetic fragments from an environmental
    sample. The resulting science of metagenomics eschews traditional ideas
    about studying the natural history of a particular organism in favor of a
    global view of the genes that exist in a community.

    Using these new metagenomic methods, environmental microbiologists have
    delved into uncharted territories–acidic lakes, deep-ocean hydrothermal
    vents, and frozen tundra, to name but a few–to see what life might exist
    there. Gradually, some have applied the new tools to explore the
    environments of humans and other animals, with recent surveys, for instance,
    of the bacterial communities in various microclimates of the human body,
    from rear molars to intestines to nasal passages. And with these studies and
    the launch of the Human Microbiome Project, the fields of medical and
    environmental microbiology have begun to merge. The resulting hybrid
    discipline embraces the complexity of a larger system; its integrative
    rather than reductive, and it supports the gathering view that our bodies,
    and the bodies of other animals, are ecosystems, and that health and disease
    may depend on complex changes in the ecology of host and microbes.

    In 2007, Cornell University microbiologist Ruth Ley coauthored a paper
    arguing that human microbiome studies could bridge the divide between
    biomedical and environmental microbiology. Like Jeffrey Gordon, her coauthor
    and mentor, Ley studies bacteria in the human gut. But while Gordon, Ley,
    and their fellow microbial sleuths might have hoped for a core set of
    organisms that would define the human microbiome, so far the reality is
    proving far more complicated. While only a few major groups of the worlds
    bacteria live in the human body, within these groups are countless bacterial
    species that vary greatly from person to person. The more people look at it,
    it seems like an endlessly diverse system, says Ley. The landscape of the
    body presents a wide range of habitats. In the nutrient-rich land of the
    intestines, communities appear to be fairly stable over time, while early
    indications show the harsher environment of the skin attracting itinerant
    communities that come and go. Communities can be as localized as the
    neighborhoods of a city; the inner elbow contains a different group of
    residents than the forearm.

    Furthermore, in contrast to habitats such as the deep sea, where emigration
    and immigration are rare events, many microbial communities associated with
    humans are affected by constant interactions with microorganisms coming in
    from the environment. Microbes in the gut, for instance, encounter bacteria
    that ride in on the food we consume. These visitors introduce a huge,
    unpredictable component that makes any determination of a core microbiome
    all the more difficult. In order to develop well-framed research questions,
    its crucial that microbiologist learn how to differentiate between
    co-evolved species and these itinerant tourists.

    What we do know, however, is that our own personal microbiomes tend to be
    partly inherited–most of us pick up bacteria from our mothers and other
    family members early in life–and partly shaped by lifestyle. Ley, who has
    surveyed the gut bacteria of several species, says that diet is an important
    factor in determining the communities that live in an organism. Even with
    our processed foods and sterilized kitchens, Ley says, humans are not
    radically different from other animals that share our eating habits.

    The individuality of each persons microbiome might complicate the project of
    studying human-microbe relationships, but it also presents
    opportunities–for instance, the possibility that medical treatments could
    be tailored to a persons particular microbiota. Much like a genetic profile,
    a persons microbiome can be seen as a sort of natural identification tag. As
    David Relman, a microbiologist at Stanford University, puts it, Its a
    biometric–a signature of who you are and your life experience. With support
    from the Human Microbiome Project, Relman is currently developing novel
    microfluidic devices that can isolate and sequence the genomes of individual
    bacterial cells. (Extracting genetic information from a complex sample
    normally mixes together hundreds if not thousands of unique species, so this
    single-microbe technology could well revolutionize the speed and scope of
    the entire field of metagenomics.) Personal microbiome information will also
    have implications for practical concerns, such as how we deploy antibiotics.
    Might those antibiotics we down at the first sign of an upset stomach be
    waging an unjustified civil war? Where do the massive quantities of
    antibiotics we feed to our livestock ultimately end up, and do they disrupt
    delicate ecological balances? We have lived with microbes for our entire
    evolutionary history; how has the widespread use of chemicals that kill them
    changed those long-forged evolutionary relationships?

    Few people are more familiar with lifes interdependence and the blurriness
    of its distinctions than microbiologists. The recent metagenomic studies
    have revealed a daunting amount of diversity in microbial life, with none of
    the clear divisions were used to in the macro world. Among bacteria, the
    entire concept of species breaks down; its difficult for scientists to even
    categorize what they are seeing. Microbes offer a picture of life that is
    fluid and ever changing.

    To come to terms with this diversity, microbiologists are today
    relinquishing the desire to name names. When studying a community, they no
    longer focus on developing a roster of who is there; instead, they ask what
    kinds of genes are present and what their functions are. In the human
    microbiome, which species we harbor may be less important than what they are
    doing.

    William Karasov, a physiologist and ecologist at University of
    Wisconsin-Madison, believes that the consequences of this new approach will
    be profound. Weve all been trained to think of ourselves as human, he says.
    Bacteria have been considered only as the source of infections, or as
    something benign living in the body. But now, he says, it appears that we
    are so interconnected with our microbes that anything studied before could
    have a microbial component that we hadnt thought about. It will take a major
    cultural shift, says Karasov, for nonmicrobiologists who study the human
    body to begin to take microorganisms seriously as a part of the system.

    Equally challenging, though in a different respect, will be changing
    long-held ideas about ourselves as independent individuals. How do we make
    sense of this suddenly crowded self? David Relman suggests that how well you
    come to terms with symbiosis depends on how comfortable you are with not
    being alone. A body that is a habitat and a continuously evolving system is
    not something most of us consider; the sense of a singular, continuous self
    is a prerequisite for sanity, at least in Western psychology. A symbiotic
    perspective depends on a willingness to see yourself as the product of
    evolutionary timescales. After all, our cells carry an ancient stamp of
    symbiosis in the form of mitochondria. These energy-producing organelles are
    the vestiges of symbiotic bacteria that migrated into cells long ago. Even
    those parts of us we consider human are part bacterial. In some ways, were
    an amalgam and a continuously evolving collective, Relman says.

    He also believes that we might have something to gain by embracing our
    bacterial side. Bacteria are often dismissed as simpler, less sophisticated,
    and less worthy of our consideration. We put a lot of weight on a life forms
    ability to think independently, Relman says, but microbes have achieved
    fantastic evolutionary success by operating on a very different principle.
    Microbial communities are filled with examples of self-sacrifice for the
    benefit of the larger colony. They form physically close communities in
    which some cells exist solely to provide structural support or protection
    for others. This intertwining of fate, as Relman puts it, is something that
    humans could consider more seriously in the dynamics of their own societies,
    instead of focusing so keenly on individual identity and success.

    Perhaps we could learn a lesson in fluidity from our symbionts. Science is
    always challenging us to let go of treasured categories and divisions. The
    theory of evolution, for instance, forced us to see species as points along
    a shared history, rather than as fixed identities. Symbiosis goes a step
    further by showing us how species are linked by more than history; they are
    living together in a continuous, interconnected now.

    When scientists in 1977 first discovered life in the deep-sea hydrothermal
    vents, including gigantic tubeworms living in scalding-hot water filled with
    hydrogen sulfide, they could not explain it. Until then, all life was
    thought to derive its energy from the sun, but this habitat was far from any
    light. Then scientists found that the worms harbored symbiotic bacteria,
    which fed on hydrogen sulfide, turning this poison into something usable by
    other life forms. The discovery underscored the fact that life as we know it
    is built upon microbes, whether we look in the deepest oceans or our own
    intestines. We once had the luxury of ignoring the diminutive members of our
    bodies and other ecosystems. Now the blinders are off.

    December 13, 2009 at 8:09 am #32801
    user244075
    Participant

    Michael,

    Sorry but I don’t understand your comments regarding the article, could you please explain more. I understand the Taoist principle that humans are a microcosm of the universe. But as far as my high school science 5/6 of the planetary mass is the Earth’s inner, outer core and mantle which is made of magma not organisms. Thanks.

    Balance and harmony,
    Derek

    December 14, 2009 at 8:30 am #32803
    Dog
    Participant

    I have been looking at how when acid and base yin and yang get waked out in the body then the five elements, bacteria, parasites, fungus, viruses, and our immunity begin to come out of harmony. So agent smith was not right to pick on us or viruses. Inner Smile Microcosmic orbit baby! Do not fight, harmonize! 😉

    December 14, 2009 at 1:02 pm #32805
    user244075
    Participant

    Well resurrecting agent Smith again, he said “Every mammal on this planet instinctively develops a natural equilibrium with the surrounding environment, but you humans do not….” couldn’t you infer in that context natural equalibrium means harmony? If so then you are making the same point, that we need to harmonize.

    Anyway forgetting agent Smith, good luck in your research. If you come to any conclusions I would enjoy reading your conclusions.

    ecnalab dna ynomrah,
    kered

    December 23, 2009 at 4:05 pm #32807
    Dog
    Participant

    Me and Mr Smith certainly agree on a disharmony. But his and Neos solution for a time was elimination, not greater intimacy and integration through self acceptance.

    January 11, 2010 at 10:24 pm #32809
    Michael Winn
    Keymaster

    This was a study done by Japaenese scientists – that the biomass that is being recycled in the magma is dead bacteria.
    m

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