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Thursday, May 30, 2013

MICROBES - WHO IS IN CHARGE OF YOUR MIND? YOU OR YOUR PARASITES?

PSYCHOLOGY ISSUES -  


On a previous post -  INVASION OF THE ZOMBIE ANIMALS -  I cited articles depicting the takeover of an animal's body and mind by parasites, directing the victim's behavior so as to benefit the parasite.
 
Humans too can become victims to parasites that modify behavior. 
 
Bacteria in your gut may be influencing your thoughts and moods, raising the possibility that probiotics could be used to treat psychiatric illnesses
 
Bacteria colonize the gut in the days following birth, during a sensitive period of brain development, and apparently influence behaviour by inducing changes in the expression of certain genes. 
 
These so-called gut microbiota constitute a virtual organ within an organ, and influence many bodily functions. Among other things, they aid in the uptake and metabolism of nutrients, modulate the inflammatory response to infection, and protect the gut from other, harmful micro-organisms.
 
A study by researchers at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario suggests that gut bacteria may also influence behaviour and cognitive processes such as memory by exerting an effect on gene activity during brain development.
 
Read more:
OUR CELLS ARE ONLY 10 PERCENT HUMAN
 
THE REST ARE MICROBIAL!

On a cell-by-cell basis, then, you are only 10 percent human. For the rest, you are microbial. 

Why don’t you see this when you look in the mirror? Because most of the microbes are bacteria, and bacterial cells are generally much smaller than animal cells. They may make up 90 percent of the cells, but they’re not 90 percent of your bulk. 
 
Gut bacteria play crucial roles in digesting food and modulating the immune system. They make small molecules that we need in order for our enzymes to work properly. 

They interact with us, altering which of our genes get turned on and off in cells in the intestinal walls. Some evidence suggests that they are essential for the building of a normal heart

Finally, it seems likely that gut bacteria will turn out to affect appetite, as well as other aspects of our behavior, though no one has shown this yet.
 
Together, your gut microbes provide you with a pool of genes far larger than that found in the human genome. Indeed, the gut “microbiome,” as it is known, is thought to contain at least 100 times more genes than the human genome

Moreover, whereas humans are extremely similar to one another at the level of the genome, the microbiome appears to differ markedly from one person to the next.

Read morehttp://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/21/microbes-r-us/

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