The human microbiome – Me, myself, us
WHAT’S
a man? Or, indeed, a woman? Biologically, the answer might seem obvious. A
human being is an individual who has grown from a fertilised egg which
contained genes from both father and mother. A growing band of biologists,
however, think this definition incomplete. They see people not just as
individuals, but also as ecosystems. In their view, the descendant of the
fertilised egg is merely one component of the system. The others are trillions
of bacteria, each equally an individual, which are found in a person’s gut, his
mouth, his scalp, his skin and all of the crevices and orifices that subtend
from his body’s surface.
That bacteria can cause
disease is no revelation. But the diseases in question are. Often, they are not
acute infections of the sort 20th-century medicine has been so good at dealing
with (and which have coloured doctors’ views of bacteria in ways that have made
medical science slow to appreciate the richness and relevance of people’s
microbial ecosystems). They are, rather, the chronic illnesses that are now, at
least in the rich world, the main focus of medical attention. For, from obesity
and diabetes, via heart disease, asthma and multiple sclerosis, to neurological
conditions such as autism, the microbiome seems to play a crucial role.