19
Jun
The Microbiome: The presence and abundance of our invisible residents
It’s been a big week for our microbiomes.
The first phase of an ambitious study to characterise all the bacteria, fungi, and other microbes that reside in our bodies has been completed, with the results published this week in a series of articles in Nature, PLoS One and Genome Biology.
It’s a significant undertaking as the majority of previous research has focused on only those bugs that can potentially cause disease. The current study hints at the enormous scope of a person’s microbial rainforest, while highlighting the emerging view that these bugs, both pathogenic and non-pathogenic, actively participate and contribute to our metabolism and are critical for our ongoing health and survival.
To give you a taste of the “complex combinations” of these microbial partners of ours, The New York Times has published this impressive ‘family tree’ illustrating their prevalence and abundance.

The Microbiome: The presence and abundance of our invisible residents

It’s been a big week for our microbiomes.

The first phase of an ambitious study to characterise all the bacteria, fungi, and other microbes that reside in our bodies has been completed, with the results published this week in a series of articles in Nature, PLoS One and Genome Biology.

It’s a significant undertaking as the majority of previous research has focused on only those bugs that can potentially cause disease. The current study hints at the enormous scope of a person’s microbial rainforest, while highlighting the emerging view that these bugs, both pathogenic and non-pathogenic, actively participate and contribute to our metabolism and are critical for our ongoing health and survival.

To give you a taste of the “complex combinations” of these microbial partners of ours, The New York Times has published this impressive ‘family tree’ illustrating their prevalence and abundance.

329 Notes

  1. thistimewasntforrealagain reblogged this from decaturjim
  2. seratonincigarettes reblogged this from decaturjim
  3. mb24jg reblogged this from decaturjim
  4. teresa-maria reblogged this from afracturedreality
  5. nonoya reblogged this from paradoxicalparadigms
  6. agentcharlton reblogged this from k-tony
  7. hellocloud9 reblogged this from afracturedreality and added:
    hologenome theory
  8. batmansnumbuhonemistress reblogged this from afracturedreality and added:
    hologenome theory
  9. telirix reblogged this from afracturedreality
  10. paradoxicalparadigms reblogged this from afracturedreality
  11. k-tony reblogged this from afracturedreality
  12. stufffstuff reblogged this from afracturedreality and added:
    hologenome theory
  13. joongkris reblogged this from afracturedreality
  14. afracturedreality reblogged this from decaturjim and added:
    During the 1980s, however, Richard Jefferson conceived the notion that a microbiome could go well beyond maintaining the...
  15. eatrantfuck reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  16. jeremymobio reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  17. pop-rocks-blowjob reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  18. carmactin reblogged this from decaturjim
  19. iturnedintoatree reblogged this from astrotastic
  20. midgetmonkey reblogged this from scishow
  21. llysakowski reblogged this from bonedust and added:
    We are our Microbiome Via
  22. bonedust reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  23. simpleessentialelements reblogged this from silver902
  24. silver902 reblogged this from sparkofspaceandtime and added:
    Yes I took microbiology in undergrad. I was going for a dual degree but ran out of money/time. Words cannot express how...
  25. mater--tua reblogged this from sparkofspaceandtime
  26. sparkofspaceandtime reblogged this from scishow
  27. pipeworks reblogged this from project-argus
  •  

About This Blog

Where there is doubt, there is freedom
(Latin proverb).

This blog resides firmly at the intersection of scientific research, education, art, and communication. Herein lies information and current happenings related to each, as well as any other sciencey goodness worth sharing.

About Me

Hi there, I'm Jim: PhD student in the biological sciences, enthusiast, friendly neighbour, Australian.

Postcards from the lab

Contact Me

rationaldiscoveryblog@gmail.com