“Are we more microbe than man?”
We may think of
ourselves as just human, but we’re really a mass of microorganisms
housed in a human shell. Every person alive is host to about 100 trillion bacterial cells. They outnumber human cells 10 to one and account for 99.9 percent of the unique genes in the body.
Katrina Ray, a senior
editor of Nature Reviews, recently suggested that the vast number of
microbes in the gut could be considered a “human microbial ‘organ’” and
asked, “Are we more microbe than man?”
Our collection of
microbiota, known as the microbiome, is the human equivalent of an
environmental ecosystem. Although the bacteria together weigh a mere
three pounds, their composition determines much about how the body
functions and, alas, sometimes malfunctions.
Like ecosystems the
world over, the human microbiome is losing its diversity, to the
potential detriment of the health of those it inhabits.
Dr. Martin J. Blaser, a specialist in infectious diseases at the New York University School of Medicine and the director of the Human Microbiome Program,
has studied the role of bacteria in disease for more than three
decades. His research extends well beyond infectious diseases to
autoimmune conditions and other ailments that have been increasing
sharply worldwide.
In his new book, “Missing Microbes,”
Dr. Blaser links the declining variety within the microbiome to our
increased susceptibility to serious, often chronic conditions, from
allergies and celiac disease to Type 1 diabetes and obesity. He and
others primarily blame antibiotics for the connection.
The damaging effect of
antibiotics on microbial diversity starts early, Dr. Blaser said. The
average American child is given nearly three courses of antibiotics in
the first two years of life, and eight more during the next eight
years. Even a short course of antibiotics like the widely prescribed
Z-pack (azithromycin, taken for five days), can result in long-term
shifts in the body’s microbial environment.
But antibiotics are
not the only way the balance within us can be disrupted. Cesarean
deliveries, which have soared in recent decades, encourage the growth
of microbes from the mother’s skin, instead of from the birth canal, in
the baby’s gut, Dr. Blaser said in an interview.
This change in
microbiota can reshape an infant’s metabolism and immune system. A
recent review of 15 studies involving 163,796 births found that,
compared with babies delivered vaginally, those born by cesarean
section were 26 percent more likely to be overweight and 22 percent more likely to be obese as adults.
The placenta has a microbiome of its own,
researchers have discovered, which may also contribute to the infant’s
gut health and help mitigate the microbial losses caused by cesarean
sections.
Other studies have
found major differences in the microorganisms living in the guts of
normal-weight and obese individuals. Although such studies cannot tell
which came first — the weight problem or the changed microbiota —
studies indicate obese mice have gut bacteria that are better able to extract calories from food.
Further evidence of a link to obesity comes from farm animals. About three-fourths of the antibiotics sold in the United States are used in livestock. These antibiotics change the animals’ microbiota, hastening their growth.
When mice are given
the same antibiotics used on livestock, the metabolism of their liver
changes, stimulating an increase in body fat, Dr. Blaser said.
Even more serious is
the increasing number of serious disorders now linked to a distortion
in the microbial balance in the human gut. They include several that are becoming more common in developed countries:
gastrointestinal ailments like Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis and
celiac disease; cardiovascular disease; nonalcoholic fatty liver
disease; digestive disorders like chronic reflux; autoimmune diseases
like multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis; and asthma and
allergies.
Some researchers have even speculated that disruptions of gut microbiota
play a role in celiac disease and the resulting explosion in demand for
gluten-free foods even among people without this disease. In
a mouse model of Type 1 diabetes, treating the animals with antibiotics
accelerates the development of the disease, Dr. Blaser said.
He and other
researchers, including a team from Switzerland and Germany, have also
linked the serious rise in asthma rates to the “rapid disappearance of
Helicobacter pylori, a bacterial pathogen that persistently colonizes
the human stomach, from Western societies.” Once, virtually everyone
harbored this microbe, which European researchers have shown protected mice from developing hallmarks of allergic asthma.
H. pylori colonization
in early life encourages production of regulatory T-cells in the
blood, which Dr. Blaser said are needed to tamp down allergic responses.
Although certain strains of H. pylori are linked to the development of
peptic ulcer and stomach cancer, other strains are protective, his
studies indicate.
Research by Dr. Blaser and his colleagues further suggests that H. pylori in the stomach protects against gastroesophageal reflux disease, Barrett’s esophagus and esophageal cancer.
Still, it is not
always possible for researchers to tell whether disruptions in gut
microbiota occur before or after people become ill. However, studies in
laboratory animals often suggest the bacterial disturbances come first.
Dr. Blaser, among many
others, cautions against the overuse of antibiotics, especially the
broad-spectrum drugs now commonly prescribed. He emphasized in
particular the importance of using fewer antibiotics in children.
“In Sweden, antibiotic
use is 40 percent of ours at any age, with no increase in disease,” he
said. “We need to educate physicians and parents that antibiotics have
costs. We need improved diagnostics. Is the infection caused by a virus
or bacteria, and if bacteria, which one?
“Then we need
narrow-spectrum antibiotics designed to knock out the pathogenic
bacteria without disrupting the health-promoting ones,” Dr. Blaser
added. “This will make it possible to treat serious infections with less
collateral effect.”
Comments
Post a Comment