The Hamilton Spectator

How we study microbes keeps us from realizing their potential benefits

- MARYCOLETT­E EZEDIOKPU MARYCOLETT­E EZEDIOKPU IS A DEPARTMENT OF BIOCHEMIST­RY AND BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES RESEARCHER AT MCMASTER UNIVERSITY.

Since Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin in 1928, high-value natural microbial products have been global commoditie­s.

The world market for microbial products is projected to reach $346.3 billion in 2027.

It’s an astonishin­g amount of money — enough to make a serious dent in the global food crisis, for example — but there is a good reason humanity has come to place such a high value on these microscopi­c helpers.

To many, microbes mean only one thing: disease.

Microbes are not always harmful, though. We couldn’t live or live well without them.

These living organisms influence our world in ways humans could never have envisaged, let alone harnessed, until quite recently, and we are still just starting to understand and harness their power.

We use them to increase crop yields, to enhance, preserve and give life to our food in the case of bread, tofu, yogurt and many others, including beer and wine.

We deliberate­ly seek probiotics to help keep ourselves healthy. We deploy microbes as invisible cleanup crews after oil spills, radioactiv­e contaminat­ion and sustained industrial activity.

Earth is covered by microbes, which cluster into functional communitie­s that interact as family, friends and foes, depending on local context.

Their social construct was beautifull­y illustrate­d by researcher­s Mary Davey and George O’Toole, who used the gut microbiome to show that microbes live in aggregates based mainly on their needs and functions.

Our digestive system, or gut, helps us to break down complex foods into usable elements. Among them, it turns starch into simple sugars, which most microbes in the gut depend on for energy.

While some microbes can further break down these sugars directly and use them as food, others stay close to microbes that can break down sugars and live off the byproducts of their processing, and still, other microbes live off the secondary processing of these byproducts.

Our orifices (mouth, nose, anus, urethra) and our skin all have unique microbe population­s that act as the first lines of defence against infection. Pathogens must overcome these resident microbes before they can establish any infection.

The point here is that microbes are never alone, they exist in functional communitie­s on any surface, including on our skin. If we were to culture a swab from any site on our skin, we would likely be able to grow and identify multiple individual colonies of microbes. Studying them one colony at a time, though, would not only take time and resources. It would miss what’s most important: their function within the specific environmen­t from which they had been isolated.

Microbes communicat­e with members within a community through chemical signals that other microbes decode and use to guide their behaviours.

The communicat­ion of microbes among themselves and with other microorgan­isms around them can be both detrimenta­l and beneficial to us as humans.

This is clearly shown in the balance of microbial communitie­s on the surface of healthy skin, which is an indication of a healthy co-ordination of activities among diverse microbes.

For example, the bacteria Staphyloco­ccus aureus is notorious for its ability to cause a wide array of skin diseases.

Skin predominan­tly covered with Staph. aureus often appears unhealthy, as in dermatitis, but scientists have shown that growing Staph. aureus with its “cousin,” Staphyloco­ccus epidermidi­s, makes it less dangerous, because of certain Staph. epidermidi­s compounds which reduce the harmful effects of Staph. aureus.

A recent study of multiple bacteria living together led to the discovery of a novel antibiotic, amycomicin, which kills S. aureus, suggesting that exploring other interactio­ns of multiple microbes could produce other significan­t discoverie­s.

Since microbes behave differentl­y in different settings, studying them in isolation limits our understand­ing of their combined functions, hampering the potential for innovative discoverie­s.

A complex but systematic approach can lead to novel discoverie­s that improve our health while also paying for themselves by generating economic impact.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A recent study of multiple bacteria living together led to the discovery of a novel antibiotic, amycomicin, which kills Staphyloco­ccus aureus, suggesting that exploring other interactio­ns of multiple microbes could produce other significan­t discoverie­s, McMaster’s Marycolett­e Ezediokpu writes.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A recent study of multiple bacteria living together led to the discovery of a novel antibiotic, amycomicin, which kills Staphyloco­ccus aureus, suggesting that exploring other interactio­ns of multiple microbes could produce other significan­t discoverie­s, McMaster’s Marycolett­e Ezediokpu writes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada