Chapter 24: Microbiome Flashcards
microbiome
assemblage of microorganisms on and in the diverse regions/habits of the body
gastrointestinal microbiota
human gi tract
comprises 400m^2 of surface area
digestion of food, absorption of nutrients, production of nutrients aided by microbial flora
contains 10^13 to 10^14 microbial cells
microbiota influenced by diet and physical conditions
stomach microbiota
10^4 cells/g
firmicutes, bacteroidetes, actinobacteria in acidic lumen
proteobacteria in gastric mucosa
helicobacter pylori present in 50% of people, risk of chronic inflammation, cause peptic ulcers
small intestine microbiota
10^8 cells/g
anaeronic fusobacterium
large intestine microbiota
10^12 cells/g
fermentation vessel
facultative aerobes (e. coli) in low numbers
obligate aerobes (clostridium, bacteroides)
yeast candida albicans (eukaryote)
bacteria in lumen and outer mucus layer
bacteria make vitamin K, B12, 9/20 AAs
gut overview
90% all human gut phylotypes fall into 1 of 3 major bacterial phyla: firmicutes, bacteroidetes, proteobacteria
individuals can be dominated by any one
no correlation with ethnicity or diet, shared by family members
influencs health, obesity, drug therapy
immune system
immune system does not properly develop in absence of microbial stimulation
early life exposure to variety of microorganisms essential to develop tolerance for beneficial microorganisms and recognize harmful ones
excessive hygiene in young kids promotes autoimmune conditions
germ free mouse study
immaturity of gut associated lymphoid tissue, decreased serum immunoglobulin levels, underdeveloped thymus and spleen
gnotobiotic mice
mice in which every microorganism present is defined
germ-free mice one class
gut colonization
not entirely understood
difference in naturally born vs c-section infants
breat-feeding vs formula influences microbiota and immune system development
gut of natural birth breast fed infants primarily bifidobacteria
microbiota develops until 3 years old
functions of gut microbiota
protective: pathogen displacement, nutrient competition, receptor competition, production of antimicrobial factors
structural: barrier fortification, inductionof IgA, apical tightening of tight junctions, immune system developments
metabolic: control IEC differentiation and proliferation, metabolize dietary carcinogens, synthesize vitamins, fermentation, ion absorption, salvage energy
other functions of gut
sensory
neuroendocrine
nervous
immune
serotonin production
bacterial balance
enhancing beneficial bacteria of gut can treat intestinal disorders
influences: age, diet, susceptibility to infection, use of antibiotics or other drugs, excess alcohol, immunologic status of host, exposure to toxic substances, ph, transit time
concept of probiotics
elie mechnikoff proposed bacteria in fermented milk can control bacterial fermentation in intestinal tract
probiotics
usually dairy food, dietary supplement containing live bacteria
replace or add to beneficial bacteria in gi tract