| US Studies Show Germs Help Species Evolve 
    
 US: May 23, 2008
 
 
 WASHINGTON - The germs that help cattle eat grass and gorillas gorge on 
    leaves may have been the secret weapon that let mammals populate the planet, 
    researchers reported on Thursday.
 
 
 Two separate teams of researchers reported on the bacteria living in and on 
    the bodies of humans and other animals, and found they are surprisingly 
    well-adapted to their hosts -- so well that they may have helped different 
    species evolve.
 
 "We have evolved together with our bacteria," Dr. Julie Segre of the 
    National Human Genome Research Institute said in a telephone interview.
 
 Both teams looked at the DNA of the bacteria, as opposed to trying to 
    painstakingly grow them in lab dishes. They said this method helped them 
    find species missed by older techniques.
 
 Not only have the microbes evolved with us, but perhaps animals that have 
    made good use of bacteria have been able to evolve further, one team of US 
    researchers said.
 
 In another study, Segre's team found more than 130 different species living 
    on the skin, many that no one knew were there before.
 
 "I thought it was amazing that there were a million bacteria per square 
    centimeter. The bacterial cells outnumber us," said Segre, whose study is 
    published in the journal Genome Research.
 
 Jeffrey Gordon of Washington University in St. Louis and colleagues looked 
    at the droppings of 60 different species of mammals and found meat-eaters, 
    plant-eaters and omnivores such as humans each have their own unique set of 
    gut bacteria.
 
 Writing in the journal Science, they said the ability of mammals to acquire 
    new symbiotic bacteria in their digestive systems may have helped so many 
    different species evolve.
 
 "This could account for the spectacular success of mammals and herbivores in 
    particular," they wrote.
 
 
 DIGESTIVE AIDS
 
 Animals, and especially mammals, make use of bacteria to help digest their 
    food. Gordon's team found that herbivores had the most diverse species of 
    bacteria in their faeces -- a not surprising finding given that the bugs are 
    needed to break down the tough cellulose found in grasses and other plants.
 
 Carnivores had the fewest number of different species and omnivores fell in 
    the middle. Human poop bacteria looked much like that of other omnivores, 
    they said.
 
 Members of the same species living in the wild and in zoos had similar gut 
    bacteria. And a strict vegetarian human had similar bacterial residents to 
    the meat-eating people.
 
 A team at The Institute for Genomic Research in Maryland found in 2006 found 
    that the number of bacteria in the human gut outnumber the cells in our 
    bodies, and proposed that many be classified as true symbionts with Homo 
    sapiens.
 
 Segre's team took samples from the insides of the elbows -- a place known to 
    be prone to eczema, a flaking skin disorder. Psoriasis, another skin 
    disease, is found on the outside of the elbow and she believes bacterial and 
    fungal populations may play a role.
 
 Learning how to manipulate bacteria may hold the secret to treating these 
    diseases, Segre said. Bacteria that break down the sebaceous output of tiny 
    skin glands help turn the waxy substance into natural moisturizer and 
    learning more about how they do this could form the basis of an entire new 
    beauty industry.
 
 "I think we do really need to change the language about thinking about 
    bacteria as pathogenic," Segre said. "We should appreciate bacteria as 
    helping our health."
 
 (Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
 
 
 Story by Maggie Fox
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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