yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

You are your microbes - Jessica Green and Karen Guillemin


3m read
·Nov 9, 2024

Translator: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

Being human, we each view ourselves as a unique and independent individual, but we're never alone! Millions of microscopic beings inhabit our bodies, and no two bodies are the same. Each is a different habitat for microbial communities: from the arid deserts of our skin, to the villages on our lips, and the cities in our mouths.

Even every tooth is its own distinctive neighborhood, and our guts are teaming metropolises of interacting microbes. And in these bustling streets of our guts, we see a constant influx of food, and every microbe has a job to do. Here's a cellulolytic bacteria, for example. Their one job is to break down cellulose, a common compound in vegetables, into sugars.

Those simple sugars then move along to the respirators, another set of microbes that snatch up these simple sugars and burn them as fuel. As food travels through our digestive tract, it reaches the fermentors who extract energy from these sugars by converting them into chemicals, like alcohol and hydrogen gas, which they spew out as waste products.

Deeper in the depths of our gut city, the syntrophs eke out a living off the fermenters' trash. At each step of this process, energy is released, and that energy is absorbed by the cells of the digestive tract. This city we just saw is different in everyone. Every person has a unique and diverse community of gut microbes that can process food in different ways.

One person's gut microbes may be capable of releasing only a fraction of the calories that another person's gut microbes can extract. So, what determines the membership of our gut microbial community? Well, things like our genetic makeup and the microbes we encounter throughout our lives can contribute to our microbial ecosystems.

The food we eat also influences which microbes live in our gut. For example, food made of complex molecules, like an apple, requires a lot of different microbial workers to break it down. But, if a food is made of simple molecules, like a lollipop, some of these workers are put out of a job. Those workers leave the city, never to return.

What doesn't function well are gut microbial communities with only a few different types of workers. For example, humans who suffer from diseases like diabetes or chronic gut inflammation typically have less microbial variety in their guts. We don't fully understand the best way to manage our individual microbial societies, but it is likely that lifestyle changes, such as eating a varied diet of complex, plant-based foods, can help revitalize our microbial ecosystems in our gut and across the entire landscape of our body.

So, we are really not alone in our body. Our bodies are homes to millions of different microbes, and we need them just as much as they need us. As we learn more about how our microbes interact with each other and with our bodies, we will reveal how we can nurture this complex, invisible world that shapes our personal identity, our health, and our well-being.

More Articles

View All
Weaver Ant Chutney | Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted
It’s the day of the final cook, and I should be getting my fires going. Good morning, this is B. How are you? But I have a lead on one more special ingredient that I’m told can be harvested nearby. What is this secret ingredient? “Phegley, Sydney, multi-…
Ancient Egypt 101 | National Geographic
The ancient Egyptian civilization lasted for over 3,000 years and became one of the most powerful and iconic civilizations in history. At its height, ancient Egypt’s empire stretched as far north as modern-day Syria and as far south as today’s Sudan. But …
Atomic Bonding Song
In my outer electron shell Lies an electron all by itself. I seek elation Through oxidation. I have always felt incomplete, One electron shy of eighteen. I’ve the highest Electron affinity. If we exchange this one electron, We’ll both achieve noble gas co…
I Fed a Chameleon From My Mouth To Study Its Mouth ( In Slow Motion) | Smarter Every Day 180
Hey, it’s me Destin, welcome back to Smarter Every Day. I’ve been wanting to do this video forever. Chameleons’ tongues are very unique, and this is a very hungry chameleon right now, and I’m going to see if I can feed him by holding a cricket in my mouth…
My Thoughts On The Millionaire Tax
What’s up, Graham? It’s Guys here. So, I want to talk about something that I’ve seen come up a lot lately, and that would be a proposed wealth tax. Now, initially, this is not a topic I was planning to address, but because we talk all things personal fina…
Breaking down forces for free body diagrams | AP Physics 1 | Khan Academy
Let’s say we have some type of hard flat frictionless surface right over here. That’s my drawing of a hard flat frictionless surface. On that, I have a block, and that block is not accelerating in any direction; it is just sitting there. Let’s say we kno…