Living With Your Partner Makes Your Bodies More
Similar—Right Down To The Cells In Them
A new study has found that moving in with your partner isn’t
just life-changing, but body-changing.
Most of your body’s internal systems are similar to those of other
people. But not your immune system. Environmental factors—your diet,
your lifestyle, and, of course, all the infections you’ve ever had—alter
the types and numbers of immune cells residing in your body, making your
immune system a unique record of the life you’ve lived. In adults, at
least, only about 25% of that variation is determined by genes.
Yet we don’t know much about how those environmental factors change the
immune system. This matters because medical researchers are increasingly
realizing that tiny differences in the immune system can make us more or
less susceptible to diseases such as diabetes or dementia.
For the study, published in Nature Immunology, a team led by Adrian
Liston at the University of Leuven examined the immune systems of 700
people by taking blood samples. Then they tracked around 150 of those
people over six months, seeing how their immune systems changed in
response to changes in the environment. There were two surprising
findings.
The first was that there doesn’t seem to be much difference between
the immune systems of men and women of the same age. This is surprising
because past studies have, for instance, shown that women suffer from
auto-immune diseases more than men do. “It may be that the tiny
differences that do exist between the sexes have a large impact on women
as they age,” Liston told Quartz.
The most unexpected discovery, however, was that people in couples are
remarkably similar. The 70 married couples in the sample showed, on
average, 50% less variation in their immune systems than randomly paired
men and women of a similar demographic.
“Though we didn’t study unmarried couples, I believe cohabiting couples
would show similar results,” Liston said.
Living with someone leads to a litany of small changes: diet, alcohol
intake, and exercise routines converge. So do exposure to pollution and
infections. Even the couple’s microbiomes—the millions of microbes
living in and on their bodies—become more similar. A 10-second kiss, for
instance, is a conduit for exchanging 80 million bacteria of about 300
species.
All these things, Liston reckons, contribute to making a couple’s immune
systems more similar.
Ultimately, knowing more about the immune system can help us tweak it in
just the right away to treat and even prevent diseases. This is why
immunotherapy is one of the hottest areas in medical research.
Source(s):
http://qz.com/
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