Gut Microbiome

Michael Scally MD

Doctor of Medicine
10+ Year Member
On the front page of its Science Times section, the New York Times (7/13, D1, Zimmer) reports that in 2008, Dr. Alexander Khoruts, of the University of Minnesota, "took on a patient suffering from a vicious gut infection of Clostridium difficile," eventually conducting a transplant in which the patient received "some of her husband's bacteria." The procedure is "known as bacteriotherapy or fecal transplantation," and it has "been carried out a few times" before. But, Dr. Khoruts' team was "able to do something previous doctors could not: they took a genetic survey of the bacteria." They are following in the footsteps of a number of scientists, who have "in recent years...started to survey the microbiome in a new way: by gathering DNA." In fact, the "biggest of these initiatives, known as the Human Microbiome Project," was "started in 2007 by the National Institutes of Health."


How Microbes Defend and Define Us
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/13/science/13micro.html?ref=health

July 12, 2010
By CARL ZIMMER

Dr. Alexander Khoruts had run out of options.

In 2008, Dr. Khoruts, a gastroenterologist at the University of Minnesota, took on a patient suffering from a vicious gut infection of Clostridium difficile. She was crippled by constant diarrhea, which had left her in a wheelchair wearing diapers. Dr. Khoruts treated her with an assortment of antibiotics, but nothing could stop the bacteria. His patient was wasting away, losing 60 pounds over the course of eight months. “She was just dwindling down the drain, and she probably would have died,” Dr. Khoruts said.

Dr. Khoruts decided his patient needed a transplant. But he didn’t give her a piece of someone else’s intestines, or a stomach, or any other organ. Instead, he gave her some of her husband’s bacteria.

Dr. Khoruts mixed a small sample of her husband’s stool with saline solution and delivered it into her colon. Writing in the Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology last month, Dr. Khoruts and his colleagues reported that her diarrhea vanished in a day. Her Clostridium difficile infection disappeared as well and has not returned since.

The procedure — known as bacteriotherapy or fecal transplantation — had been carried out a few times over the past few decades. But Dr. Khoruts and his colleagues were able to do something previous doctors could not: they took a genetic survey of the bacteria in her intestines before and after the transplant.

Before the transplant, they found, her gut flora was in a desperate state. “The normal bacteria just didn’t exist in her,” said Dr. Khoruts. “She was colonized by all sorts of misfits.”

Two weeks after the transplant, the scientists analyzed the microbes again. Her husband’s microbes had taken over. “That community was able to function and cure her disease in a matter of days,” said Janet Jansson, a microbial ecologist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and a co-author of the paper. “I didn’t expect it to work. The project blew me away.”

Scientists are regularly blown away by the complexity, power, and sheer number of microbes that live in our bodies. “We have over 10 times more microbes than human cells in our bodies,” said George Weinstock of Washington University in St. Louis. But the microbiome, as it’s known, remains mostly a mystery. “It’s as if we have these other organs, and yet these are parts of our bodies we know nothing about.”

Dr. Weinstock is part of an international effort to shed light on those puzzling organs. He and his colleagues are cataloging thousands of new microbe species by gathering their DNA sequences. Meanwhile, other scientists are running experiments to figure out what those microbes are actually doing. They’re finding that the microbiome does a lot to keep us in good health. Ultimately, researchers hope, they will learn enough about the microbiome to enlist it in the fight against diseases.

“In just the last year, it really went from a small cottage industry to the big time,” said David Relman of Stanford University.

The microbiome first came to light in the mid-1600s, when the Dutch lens-grinder Antonie van Leeuwenhoek scraped the scum off his teeth, placed it under a microscope and discovered that it contained swimming creatures. Later generations of microbiologists continued to study microbes from our bodies, but they could only study the ones that could survive in a laboratory. For many species, this exile meant death.

In recent years, scientists have started to survey the microbiome in a new way: by gathering DNA. They scrape the skin or take a cheek swab and pull out the genetic material. Getting the DNA is fairly easy. Sequencing and making sense of it is hard, however, because a single sample may yield millions of fragments of DNA from hundreds of different species.

A number of teams are working together to tackle this problem in a systematic way. Dr. Weinstock is part of the biggest of these initiatives, known as the Human Microbiome Project. The $150 million initiative was started in 2007 by the National Institutes of Health. The project team is gathering samples from 18 different sites on the bodies of 300 volunteers.

To make sense of the genes that they’re gathering, they are sequencing the entire genomes of some 900 species that have been cultivated in the lab. Before the project, scientists had only sequenced about 20 species in the microbiome. In May, the scientists published details on the first 178 genomes. They discovered 29,693 genes that are unlike any known genes. (The entire human genome contains only around 20,000 protein-coding genes.)

“This was quite surprising to us, because these are organisms that have been studied for a long time,” said Karen E. Nelson of the J. Craig Venter Institute in Rockville, Md.

The new surveys are helping scientists understand the many ecosystems our bodies offer microbes. In the mouth alone, Dr. Relman estimates, there are between 500 and 1,000 species. “It hasn’t reached a plateau yet: the more people you look at, the more species you get,” he said. The mouth in turn is divided up into smaller ecosystems, like the tongue, the gums, the teeth. Each tooth—and even each side of each tooth—has a different combination of species.

Scientists are even discovering ecosystems in our bodies where they weren’t supposed to exist. Lungs have traditionally been considered to be sterile because microbiologists have never been able to rear microbes from them. A team of scientists at Imperial College London recently went hunting for DNA instead. Analyzing lung samples from healthy volunteers, they discovered 128 species of bacteria. Every square centimeter of our lungs is home to 2,000 microbes.

Some microbes can only survive in one part of the body, while others are more cosmopolitan. And the species found in one person’s body may be missing from another’s. Out of the 500 to 1,000 species of microbes identified in people’s mouths, for example, only about 100 to 200 live in any one person’s mouth at any given moment. Only 13 percent of the species on two people’s hands are the same. Only 17 percent of the species living on one person’s left hand also live on the right one.

This variation means that the total number of genes in the human microbiome must be colossal. European and Chinese researchers recently catalogued all the microbial genes in stool samples they collected from 124 individuals. In March, they published a list of 3.3 million genes.

The variation in our microbiomes emerges the moment we are born.

“You have a sterile baby coming from a germ-free environment into the world,” said Maria Dominguez-Bello, a microbiologist at the University of Puerto Rico. Recently, she and her colleagues studied how sterile babies get colonized in a hospital in the Venezuelan city of Puerto Ayacucho. They took samples from the bodies of newborns within minutes of birth. They found that babies born vaginally were coated with microbes from their mothers’ birth canals. But babies born by Caesarean section were covered in microbes typically found on the skin of adults.

“Our bet was that the Caesarean section babies were sterile, but it’s like they’re magnets,” said Dr. Dominguez-Bello.

We continue to be colonized every day of our lives. “Surrounding us and infusing us is this cloud of microbes,” said Jeffrey Gordon of Washington University. We end up with different species, but those species generally carry out the same essential chemistry that we need to survive. One of those tasks is breaking down complex plant molecules. “We have a pathetic number of enzymes encoded in the human genome, whereas microbes have a large arsenal,” said Dr. Gordon.

In addition to helping us digest, the microbiome helps us in many other ways. The microbes in our nose, for example, make antibiotics that can kill the dangerous pathogens we sniff. Our bodies wait for signals from microbes in order to fully develop. When scientists rear mice without any germ in their bodies, the mice end up with stunted intestines.

In order to co-exist with our microbiome, our immune system has to be able to tolerate thousands of harmless species, while attacking pathogens. Scientists are finding that the microbiome itself guides the immune system to the proper balance.

One way the immune system fights pathogens is with inflammation. Too much inflammation can be harmful, so we have immune cells that produce inflammation-reducing signals. Last month, Sarkis Mazmanian and June L. Round at Caltech reported that mice reared without a microbiome can’t produce an inflammation-reducing molecule called IL-10.

The scientists then inoculated the mice with a single species of gut bacteria, known as Bacteroides fragilis. Once the bacteria began to breed in the guts of the mice, they produced a signal that was taken up by certain immune cells. In response to the signal, the cells developed the ability to produce IL-10.

Scientists are not just finding new links between the microbiome and our health. They’re also finding that many diseases are accompanied by dramatic changes in the makeup of our inner ecosystems. The Imperial College team that discovered microbes in the lungs, for example, also discovered that people with asthma have a different collection of microbes than healthy people. Obese people also have a different set of species in their guts than people of normal weight.

In some cases, new microbes may simply move into our bodies when disease alters the landscape. In other cases, however, the microbes may help give rise to the disease. Some surveys suggest that babies delivered by Caesarian section are more likely to get skin infections from multiply-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. It’s possible that they lack the defensive shield of microbes from their mother’s birth canal.

Caesarean sections have also been linked to an increase in asthma and allergies in children. So have the increased use of antibiotics in the United States and other developed countries. Children who live on farms — where they can get a healthy dose of microbes from the soil — are less prone to getting autoimmune disorders than children who grow up in cities.

Some scientists argue that these studies all point to the same conclusion: when children are deprived of their normal supply of microbes, their immune systems get a poor education. In some people, untutored immune cells become too eager to unleash a storm of inflammation. Instead of killing off invaders, they only damage the host’s own body.

A better understanding of the microbiome might give doctors a new way to fight some of these diseases. For more than a century, scientists have been investigating how to treat patients with beneficial bacteria. But probiotics, as they’re sometimes called, have only had limited success. The problem may lie in our ignorance of precisely how most microbes in our bodies affect our health.

Dr. Khoruts and his colleagues have carried out 15 more fecal transplants, 13 of which cured their patients. They’re now analyzing the microbiome of their patients to figure out precisely which species are wiping out the Clostridium difficile infections. Instead of a crude transplant, Dr. Khoruts hopes that eventually he can give his patients what he jokingly calls “God’s probiotic” — a pill containing microbes whose ability to fight infections has been scientifically validated.

Dr. Weinstock, however, warns that a deep understanding of the microbiome is a long way off.

“In terms of hard-boiled science, we’re falling short of the mark,” he said. A better picture of the microbiome will only emerge once scientists can use the genetic information Dr. Weinstock and his colleagues are gathering to run many more experiments.

“It’s just old-time science. There are no short-cuts around that,” he said.
 
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Re: How Microbes Defend and Define Us

LeMeeGitSummaDatforMyCaderraks........
 
Impact Of Diet In Shaping Gut Microbiota [Bacteria]

“The notion that gut flora plays a role in human health has been marginally ignored,” says evolutionary nutritionist Loren Cordain of Colorado State University in Fort Collins, who was not involved with this study. “What we’ve found over the past five or 10 years is that it plays a huge role in our health and well being.”

The human gut “metagenome” is a complex consortium of trillions of microbes, whose collective genomes contain at least 100 times as many genes as our own eukaryote genome (1). This essential “organ,” the microbiome, provides the host with enhanced metabolic capabilities, protection against pathogens, education of the immune system, and modulation of gastrointestinal (GI) development (2).

We do not yet completely understand how the different environments and wide range of diets that modern humans around the world experience has affected the microbial ecology of the human gut.

Contemporary human beings are genetically adapted to the environment in which their ancestors survived and which conditioned their genetic makeup. In mammals, both diet and phylogeny influence the increase in bacterial diversity from carnivore to omnivore to herbivore (3). Dietary habits are considered one of the main factors contributing to the diversity of human gut microbiota (2). Profound changes in diet and lifestyle conditions began with the so-called “Neolithic revolution” with the introduction of agriculture and animal husbandry ?10,000 y ago (4). After that time, food resources became more abundant and constant, the concentration of large populations in limited areas created selective pressure that favored pathogens specialized in colonizing human hosts and probably produced the first wave of emerging human diseases (5). It has been hypothesized that bacteria specialized in human-associated niches, including our gut commensal flora, underwent intense transformation during the social and demographic changes that took place with the first Neolithic settlements (6).

Western developed countries successfully controlled infectious diseases during the second half of the last century, by improving sanitation and using antibiotics and vaccines. At the same time, a rise in new diseases such as allergic, autoimmune disorders, and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) both in adults and in children has been observed (5), and it is hypothesized that improvements in hygiene together with decreased microbial exposure in childhood are considered responsible for this increase (7). The GI microflora plays a crucial role in the pathogenesis of IBD (8), and recent studies demonstrate that obesity is associated with imbalance in the normal gut microbiota (9, 10).

The aim of this study was to compare the gut microbiota of children aged 1–6 y living in a village of rural Africa in an environment that still resembles that of Neolithic subsistence farmers with the gut microbiota of western European children of the same age, eating the diet and living in an environment typical of the developed world. These two childhood populations provided an attractive model for assessing the impact of many environmental variables on the gut microbiota.

In the following study, they address three general questions regarding the geography and evolution of the human microbiota: (i) how is bacterial diversity partitioned within and between the two populations studied; (ii) is there a possible correlation between bacterial diversity and diet; and (iii) what is the distribution of well-known bacterial pathogens in the two populations, given the different hygienic and geographic conditions?


De Filippo C, Cavalieri D, Di Paola M, et al. Impact of diet in shaping gut microbiota revealed by a comparative study in children from Europe and rural Africa. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Impact of diet in shaping gut microbiota revealed by a comparative study in children from Europe and rural Africa — PNAS

Gut microbial composition depends on different dietary habits just as health depends on microbial metabolism, but the association of microbiota with different diets in human populations has not yet been shown. In this work, we compared the fecal microbiota of European children (EU) and that of children from a rural African village of Burkina Faso (BF), where the diet, high in fiber content, is similar to that of early human settlements at the time of the birth of agriculture. By using high-throughput 16S rDNA sequencing and biochemical analyses, we found significant differences in gut microbiota between the two groups. BF children showed a significant enrichment in Bacteroidetes and depletion in Firmicutes (P < 0.001), with a unique abundance of bacteria from the genus Prevotella and Xylanibacter, known to contain a set of bacterial genes for cellulose and xylan hydrolysis, completely lacking in the EU children. In addition, we found significantly more short-chain fatty acids (P < 0.001) in BF than in EU children. Also, Enterobacteriaceae (Shigella and Escherichia) were significantly underrepresented in BF than in EU children (P < 0.05). We hypothesize that gut microbiota coevolved with the polysaccharide-rich diet of BF individuals, allowing them to maximize energy intake from fibers while also protecting them from inflammations and noninfectious colonic diseases. This study investigates and compares human intestinal microbiota from children characterized by a modern western diet and a rural diet, indicating the importance of preserving this treasure of microbial diversity from ancient rural communities worldwide.
 
Re: Impact Of Diet In Shaping Gut Microbiota [Bacteria]

i ferget if this was posted here, but it's a study showing the stability of gut VIRUSES over a lifetime in any given person, and that this viral population is actually controlling of gut flora in general...

The gut's 'friendly' viruses revealed : Nature News

The gut's 'friendly' viruses revealed

DNA sequencing reveals a new world of bacterial viruses in our intestines.

Amy Maxmen

In the latest exploration into the universe of organisms inhabiting our bodies,
microbiologists have discovered new viral genes in faeces. They find that the
composition of virus populations inhabiting the tail ends of healthy intestines
(as represented in our stools) is unique to each individual and stable over
time. Even identical twins — who share many of the same intestinal bacteria —
differed in their gut's viral make-up.

More than 80% of the viral genetic sequences found, which included sequences
characteristic of both animal and bacterial viruses, have never been reported
previously. "This is a largely unexplored world," says Jeffrey Gordon at
Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, and an author on the paper, which
is published in Nature today1. "We are truly distinct lifeforms — sums of
microbial and human parts."

More than 10 trillion bacteria normally inhabit the gastrointestinal tract,
where they synthesize essential amino acids and vitamins, produce
anti-inflammatory factors and help break down starches, sugars and proteins that
people could not otherwise digest. Within and among these bacteria live
bacterial viruses, or bacteriophages, which affect bacterial numbers and
behaviour as they either prey on bacteria or co-exist with them, shuttling genes
from one bacterium to another.

This microscopic dynamic ecosystem affects our lives in ways we still do not
fully understand. Indeed, the rise in the incidence of food allergies in Western
societies has led to hypotheses that extreme hygiene disrupts the ability of
microbes to colonize human guts, resulting in a lack of tolerance to usually
harmless foods.

"This study is looking into the genesis of the human body by seeing what
viruses within it are up to."


To explore this provocative hypothesis, researchers must first understand the
complete composition of the microbial ecosystem of the healthy body. To this
end, Gordon's group and others are beginning to catalogue the human
'microbiome', all the microorganisms living in the human body, using advanced
DNA sequencing technologies. Until now, however, such attention has primarily
focused on the bacteria rather than viruses.

"This is a wonderful study," says David Relman, a microbiologist at Stanford
University in California, who is involved with the US National Institute of
Health's Human Microbiome Project. "It could be that viruses are the real
drivers of the system because of their ability to modify the bacteria that then
modify the human host," he says. "So this study is in some ways looking into the
genesis of the human body by seeing what viruses within it are up to."
Microbial truce

According to the new study, bacterial viruses in the terminal gut or colon seem
to exist in a more stable state than do similar communities in the environment,
such as in the oceans. Faeces from each individual — four pairs of identical
twins and their mothers — carried a distinct viral community that varied by less
than 5% over the course of a year. The bacterial viruses also appeared to mainly
be lying low as 'prophages' rather than multiplying and killing the bacteria
they infect.

"In oceans, the modality of viruses has tended to be predatory," comments Edward
DeLong at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. "Now the
interesting thing here is that the system in the faecal microbiota seems to be
driven by prophages, which tend to basically integrate their genetic material
into the host genome and hide there — it's a much more stable situation."

ADVERTISEMENT

"This kind of stability implies that there is a symbiosis between bacteria and
viruses," comments Martin Blaser at New York University Medical Center. "This is
different from a predator-prey, or an arms race, situation. This is a picture of
a more settled existence, in which the different populations are working
together."

The team found genes encoding proteins never detected before in bacterial
viruses. When in bacteria, these proteins are part of pathways responsible for
carbohydrate metabolism and amino-acid synthesis. Viruses carrying such genes
might alter them and insert them into gut bacteria, potentially changing a
person's metabolism.

Because human nutrition partly depends on the relationship between bacteria and
their viruses, understanding the dynamics of that relationship might yield
treatments for obesity, allergies and other maladies. "This human ecosystem is
quite important because it determines what we can do and what we can eat," says
DeLong. "That's why we should care about this."

*
References
1. Reyes, A. et al. Nature 466, 334-340 (2010). | Article
 
Re: Impact Of Diet In Shaping Gut Microbiota [Bacteria]

i ferget if this was posted here, but it's a study showing the stability of gut VIRUSES over a lifetime in any given person, and that this viral population is actually controlling of gut flora in general...

The gut's 'friendly' viruses revealed : Nature News

The gut's 'friendly' viruses revealed

DNA sequencing reveals a new world of bacterial viruses in our intestines.

Amy Maxmen

In the latest exploration into the universe of organisms inhabiting our bodies,
microbiologists have discovered new viral genes in faeces. They find that the
composition of virus populations inhabiting the tail ends of healthy intestines
(as represented in our stools) is unique to each individual and stable over
time. Even identical twins — who share many of the same intestinal bacteria —
differed in their gut's viral make-up.

More than 80% of the viral genetic sequences found, which included sequences
characteristic of both animal and bacterial viruses, have never been reported
previously. "This is a largely unexplored world," says Jeffrey Gordon at
Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, and an author on the paper, which
is published in Nature today1. "We are truly distinct lifeforms — sums of
microbial and human parts."

More than 10 trillion bacteria normally inhabit the gastrointestinal tract,
where they synthesize essential amino acids and vitamins, produce
anti-inflammatory factors and help break down starches, sugars and proteins that
people could not otherwise digest. Within and among these bacteria live
bacterial viruses, or bacteriophages, which affect bacterial numbers and
behaviour as they either prey on bacteria or co-exist with them, shuttling genes
from one bacterium to another.

This microscopic dynamic ecosystem affects our lives in ways we still do not
fully understand. Indeed, the rise in the incidence of food allergies in Western
societies has led to hypotheses that extreme hygiene disrupts the ability of
microbes to colonize human guts, resulting in a lack of tolerance to usually
harmless foods.

"This study is looking into the genesis of the human body by seeing what
viruses within it are up to."


To explore this provocative hypothesis, researchers must first understand the
complete composition of the microbial ecosystem of the healthy body. To this
end, Gordon's group and others are beginning to catalogue the human
'microbiome', all the microorganisms living in the human body, using advanced
DNA sequencing technologies. Until now, however, such attention has primarily
focused on the bacteria rather than viruses.

"This is a wonderful study," says David Relman, a microbiologist at Stanford
University in California, who is involved with the US National Institute of
Health's Human Microbiome Project. "It could be that viruses are the real
drivers of the system because of their ability to modify the bacteria that then
modify the human host," he says. "So this study is in some ways looking into the
genesis of the human body by seeing what viruses within it are up to."
Microbial truce

According to the new study, bacterial viruses in the terminal gut or colon seem
to exist in a more stable state than do similar communities in the environment,
such as in the oceans. Faeces from each individual — four pairs of identical
twins and their mothers — carried a distinct viral community that varied by less
than 5% over the course of a year. The bacterial viruses also appeared to mainly
be lying low as 'prophages' rather than multiplying and killing the bacteria
they infect.

"In oceans, the modality of viruses has tended to be predatory," comments Edward
DeLong at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. "Now the
interesting thing here is that the system in the faecal microbiota seems to be
driven by prophages, which tend to basically integrate their genetic material
into the host genome and hide there — it's a much more stable situation."

ADVERTISEMENT

"This kind of stability implies that there is a symbiosis between bacteria and
viruses," comments Martin Blaser at New York University Medical Center. "This is
different from a predator-prey, or an arms race, situation. This is a picture of
a more settled existence, in which the different populations are working
together."

The team found genes encoding proteins never detected before in bacterial
viruses. When in bacteria, these proteins are part of pathways responsible for
carbohydrate metabolism and amino-acid synthesis. Viruses carrying such genes
might alter them and insert them into gut bacteria, potentially changing a
person's metabolism.

Because human nutrition partly depends on the relationship between bacteria and
their viruses, understanding the dynamics of that relationship might yield
treatments for obesity, allergies and other maladies. "This human ecosystem is
quite important because it determines what we can do and what we can eat," says
DeLong. "That's why we should care about this."

*
References
1. Reyes, A. et al. Nature 466, 334-340 (2010). | Article

Now do you see how I keep focusing on the gut as primary source of issues..I have been running alot of stool sample test from people with estrogen issues that can not regulate and so far all of them have came back with some gut bacteria overgrowth identified.
 
Re: Impact Of Diet In Shaping Gut Microbiota [Bacteria]

Now do you see how I keep focusing on the gut as primary source of issues..I have been running alot of stool sample test from people with estrogen issues that can not regulate and so far all of them have came back with some gut bacteria overgrowth identified.

well i've always understood the importance of entire GI system to the rest of the body, and have had particular interest in the primacy of the gut lymphatic system, which acting in feedback with the gut flora (and apparently gut virii), constitutes the bulk of human immune system activity.

i'd be curious to see how clinical practice evolves from this discovery...i assume developing a viral "GI-fingerprint" for individuals is several years away at best.
 
Bacterial Changes May Trigger Diseases Like Rheumatoid Arthritis

Gomez A, Luckey D, Yeoman CJ, et al. Loss of Sex and Age Driven Differences in the Gut Microbiome Characterize Arthritis-Susceptible *0401 Mice but Not Arthritis-Resistant *0402 Mice. PLoS ONE;7(4):e36095. PLoS ONE: Loss of Sex and Age Driven Differences in the Gut Microbiome Characterize Arthritis-Susceptible *0401 Mice but Not Arthritis-Resistant *0402 Mice

Background - HLA-DRB1*0401 is associated with susceptibility, while HLA-DRB1*0402 is associated with resistance to developing rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and collagen-induced arthritis in humans and transgenic mice respectively. The influence of gut-joint axis has been suggested in RA, though not yet proven.

Methodology/Principal Findings - We have used HLA transgenic mice carrying arthritis susceptible and -resistant HLA-DR genes to explore if genetic factors and their interaction with gut flora gut can be used to predict susceptibility to develop arthritis. Pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA gene from the fecal microbiomes of DRB1*0401 and DRB1*0402 transgenic mice revealed that the guts of *0401 mice is dominated by a Clostridium-like bacterium, whereas the guts of *0402 mice are enriched for members of the Porphyromonadaceae family and Bifidobacteria. DRB1*0402 mice harbor a dynamic sex and age-influenced gut microbiome while DRB1*0401 mice did not show age and sex differences in gut microbiome even though they had altered gut permeability. Cytokine transcripts, measured by rtPCR, in jejuna showed differential TH17 regulatory network gene transcripts in *0401 and *0402 mice.

Conclusions/Significance - We have demonstrated for the first time that HLA genes in association with the gut microbiome may determine the immune environment and that the gut microbiome might be a potential biomarker as well as contributor for susceptibility to arthritis. Identification of pathogenic commensal bacteria would provide new understanding of disease pathogenesis, thereby leading to novel approaches for therapy.
 
Re: Bacterial Changes May Trigger Diseases Like Rheumatoid Arthritis

Finally something I know a lot about. The concept of antigenic mimicry priming the immune system to self antigen is well established and I think as time goes on we will find it plays are large role in many chronic diseases. Inflammation and the resultant derangement of normal immune regulation is quickly becoming the main cause of many diseases......
 
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Re: Bacterial Changes May Trigger Diseases Like Rheumatoid Arthritis

Yes, I have read some stuff on that shit. I retrospect I am not sure if you are talking R or O arthritis. But if O, my money is on the break/repair process. I see the title now as Rheum and dont doubt it.... It has to be something nasty either eating away, or turning the body on its self. You have to wonder would a good run of Doxy get it if in time......!!!!!!?????? I read something recently about some terminal shit that they treay with a 1+year Doxy script ( Sweet Lord above). I wonder if ANY of those people ever develop Rheum....Seems like I was researching alcohol issues and it was some condition resulting....
 
Re: Bacterial Changes May Trigger Diseases Like Rheumatoid Arthritis

Finally something I know a lot about. The concept of antigenic mimicry priming the immune system to self antigen is well established and I think as time goes on we will find it plays are large role in many chronic diseases. Inflammation and the resultant derangement of normal immune regulation is quickly becoming the main cause of many diseases......

I have been saying this for 8 years, but I do not know anything LOL
While people are chasing hormone levels I have been manipulating gi, immune and neurotransmitters which in a lot of cases will bring back up hormones levels in younger males.
I have been finding high correlation of kleb in people with RA
 
Re: Bacterial Changes May Trigger Diseases Like Rheumatoid Arthritis

NIH Human Microbiome Project defines normal bacterial makeup of the body; Genome sequencing creates first reference data for microbes living with healthy adults
http://www.cancer.gov/newscenter/pressreleases/2012/HMPnormalbodybacteria

Microbes inhabit just about every part of the human body, living on the skin, in the gut, and up the nose. Sometimes they cause sickness, but most of the time, microorganisms live in harmony with their human hosts, providing vital functions essential for human survival. For the first time, a consortium of researchers organized by the National Institutes of Health has mapped the normal microbial make-up of healthy humans, producing numerous insights and even a few surprises.
 
Re: Bacterial Changes May Trigger Diseases Like Rheumatoid Arthritis

Sometimes Arthritis pain can be treated with Doxycycline. It's anti inflammatory and can actually lower CRP by up to 50%. I thought about asking my Dr. to put me on a sub-microbial dose of 20 mg 2x per day to see how I do. I feel really good anytime I have to take it for something. It also lowers insulin resistance rather dramatically.
 
Re: OnLine First 2013

Markle JG, Frank DN, Mortin-Toth S, et al. Sex Differences in the Gut Microbiome Drive Hormone-Dependent Regulation of Autoimmunity. Science. Sex Differences in the Gut Microbiome Drive Hormone-Dependent Regulation of Autoimmunity

Microbial exposures and sex hormones exert potent effects on autoimmune diseases, many of which are more prevalent in women. Here, we demonstrate a direct interaction between sex hormones and early life microbial exposures on the control of autoimmunity in the non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse model of type 1 diabetes (T1D). Colonization by commensal microbes elevated serum testosterone and protected NOD males from T1D. Transfer of gut microbiota from adult males to immature females altered the recipient's microbiota, resulting in elevated testosterone and metabolomic changes, reduced islet inflammation and autoantibody production, and robust T1D protection. These effects were dependent on androgen receptor activity. Thus, the commensal microbial community alters sex hormone levels and regulates autoimmune disease fate in individuals with high genetic risk.
 
Evans JM, Morris LS, Marchesi J. The gut microbiome: The role of a virtual organ in the endocrinology of the host. Journal of Endocrinology. http://joe.endocrinology-journals.org/content/early/2013/07/05/JOE-13-0131.abstract

The human microbiome contains a vast array of microbes and genes which shows greater complexity than the host's own karyome, many of these functions are beneficial and show co-evolution with the host while others are detrimental. The microbiota which colonize the gut is now being considered as a virtual organ or emergent system, with properties that need to be integrated into host biology and physiology. Unlike other organs the functions that the gut microbiota provide to the host are as yet not fully understood and can be quite easily removed by antibiotics, diet or surgery. In this review we have looked some of the best characterised functions that only the gut microbiota provide and how they interact with the host's endocrine system and we have tried to make it clear that 21st century biology cannot afford to ignore this facet of biology, if it wants to fully understand what makes us human.
 
Oh WHAT...? Fight fire with fire. This is what I have been saying for AGEs.....:drooling:

When in doubt - LOOK TO THE PIT.... ! LOL:)

Oh forgot. To take a SHIT and pack it in someone elses arse might be FREE.. We cant have that can we now....:D
 
David LA, Maurice CF, Carmody RN, et al. Diet rapidly and reproducibly alters the human gut microbiome. Nature;advance online publication. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature12820.html

Long-term dietary intake influences the structure and activity of the trillions of microorganisms residing in the human gut, but it remains unclear how rapidly and reproducibly the human gut microbiome responds to short-term macronutrient change. Here we show that the short-term consumption of diets composed entirely of animal or plant products alters microbial community structure and overwhelms inter-individual differences in microbial gene expression. The animal-based diet increased the abundance of bile-tolerant microorganisms (Alistipes, Bilophila andBacteroides) and decreased the levels of Firmicutes that metabolize dietary plant polysaccharides (Roseburia, Eubacterium rectale and Ruminococcus bromii). Microbial activity mirrored differences between herbivorous and carnivorous mammals, reflecting trade-offs between carbohydrate and protein fermentation. Foodborne microbes from both diets transiently colonized the gut, including bacteria, fungi and even viruses. Finally, increases in the abundance and activity ofBilophila wadsworthia on the animal-based diet support a link between dietary fat, bile acids and the outgrowth of microorganisms capable of triggering inflammatory bowel disease. In concert, these results demonstrate that the gut microbiome can rapidly respond to altered diet, potentially facilitating the diversity of human dietary lifestyles.
 
Hardasnails..

I have to ask as I am considering doing a stool test or tests..just to gauge what's
going on inside. What type of stool tests are recommended. The one I always keep hearing about is the Occult Blood test ? What about..

1)Test to check enzymes
2)Test to check if the biliary tree is function well.
3)Test to check overgrowth of Bacteria..

are there such stool tests ? If anyone can provide some reading material via links..greatly appreciated.

Dom
 

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