Stanford Research Scientists Discover 99% of the Microbes Inside Us are Unknown to Science
Posted on August 24, 2017 Comments (0)
Readers of this blog know I am fascinated by the human microbiome. It is amazing how much of our biology is determined by entities within us that are not us (at least not our DNA) (bacteria, viruses etc.). This whole area of study is very new and we have quite a bit to learn. There are scientists across the globe studying this area and learning a great deal.
Stanford study indicates that more than 99% of the microbes inside us are unknown to science
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The “vast majority” of it belonged to a phylum called proteobacteria, which includes, among many other species, pathogens such as E. coli and Salmonella. Previously unidentified viruses in the torque teno family, generally not associated with disease but often found in immunocompromised patients, made up the largest group of viruses.
“We’ve doubled the number of known viruses in that family through this work,” Quake said. Perhaps more important, they’ve found an entirely new group of torque teno viruses. Among the known torque teno viruses, one group infects humans and another infects animals, but many of the ones the researchers found didn’t fit in either group. “We’ve now found a whole new class of human-infecting ones that are closer to the animal class than to the previously known human ones, so quite divergent on the evolutionary scale,” he said.
Related: We are Not Us Without The Microbes Within Us – Webcasts on the Human Microbiome – People are Superorganisms With Microbiomes of Thousands of Species (2013) – We Have Thousands of Viruses In Us All the Time (2015) – Tracking the Ecosystem Within Us (2007)
Categories: Life Science, Research, Science
Tags: bacteria, biology, human health, Life Science, microbiome, Stanford, university research, virus
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