How It Works

70,000 viruses found in the human gut

- Words by Yasemin Saplakoglu

Scientists have identified more than 70,000 previously unknown viruses that live in the human gut and infect the bacteria that live there, but how they impact our bodies is a mystery. The gut microbiome, or the community of microbes that we carry around in our digestive system, plays an important role in food digestion and regulating the immune system. But many studies have also linked imbalances in gut microbes to conditions including liver disease, obesity and allergies.

Yet shockingly little is known about it. Although the microbiome includes a variety of microorgan­isms, including bacteria and viruses, previous studies have focused mainly on gut bacteria because they are easier to detect.

A group of researcher­s has used a method called metagenomi­cs to identify the viruses.

This method involves analysing all of the genetic material from a community of microbes together and then mapping the individual sequences found to specific species. They analysed more than 28,000 gut microbiome samples taken from 28 countries.

This process revealed complete genomes for more than 142,000 species of viruses living in the human gut. A single person, however, carries only a fraction of these species. Though many types of viruses live in the gut, they focused on viruses that can infect bacteria called ‘bacterioph­ages’, or ‘phages’ for short.

The researcher­s limited their scope to bacterioph­ages because “we are still figuring out their role in human health,” said Luis Camarillog­uerrero, a recent PHD graduate from the Wellcome Sanger Institute. “It’s probably safe to say that the vast majority of them are not harmful to us and are simply an integral component of our body microbiota.” Phages may play a central role in the gut microbiome, for instance, by providing their bacterial hosts with advantageo­us traits and influencin­g how those bacteria evolve.

“As bacterial communitie­s are a critical component of our gut, it’s not difficult to imagine that phages could be paying a key role in maintainin­g a healthy equilibriu­m in our intestine,” said Camarillo-guerrero. However, there are known cases when phages have contribute­d to disease. For example, both diphtheria, a serious bacterial infection, and botulism, a serious illness that attacks the body’s nerves, are caused by toxins that are encoded by phage genes.

 ??  ?? An artist's illustrati­on of the human microbiome
An artist's illustrati­on of the human microbiome

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