How Bacteria Rule Over Your Body ā€“ The Microbiome

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Captions
Microbes are everywhere, on your phone, in your water bottle, on your hands before you wash them, on your hands after you wash them, and literally everywhere else on top of you too. Microbes are omnipresent at any moment, and there is nothing we can do about it So, millions of years ago we made a pact, we give them shelter and food, and in turn they work for us. But the more we learn about this partnership, the more it looks like a cold war Inside our mother's womb, humans start out sterile When we are born and traveling through the birth canal, billions of our mother's bacteria cover every single part of our bodies. This is an essential part of human health. Children born via C-section have a higher rate of asthma, immune diseases and even leukemia. So our bodies do not only accept the invasion of microorganisms, they welcome it. Over millions of years, we co-evolved to make the best of our relationship. Mother's milk for example, contains special sugars that are meant to feed and support certain groups of microbes, work as a decoy for others, and help to modulate the immune system. It takes up to two years, until a healthy microbe community has formed. Every human has their own unique microbiome, made up of bacteria, viruses, fungi and other organisms. We have three categories of guests, on and in our bodies. One: Quiet passengers that do their own thing, and are politely ignored. By being there, they take up space and keep more aggressive intruders in check. Two: Guests that harm us, But with whom we've learned to live, for example, bacteria that literally create acid that melts our teeth, if we don't brush enough. They want to take up as much space as they can, and we don't want them to. But, we can't get rid of them entirely. Three: Friendly fellows that our bodies want to have around, most of them are a community of 380,000 billion bacteria, from up to 5,000 different species, that live in our gut. These gut microorganisms help us digest food, and pull additional calories from things that we can't digest ourselves. Unfortunately, our gut is also the perfect point of attack for intruders, so it's guarded by an aggressive army, our immune system. To survive here, our microbiome co-evolved with us to be able to communicate with our body. The most important part of that is to ask the immune system to not kill them. But, they also have a real motivation to keep our gut healthy, so some of them produce a messenger substances, that help to educate the immune system, and others stimulate the gut cells to regenerate faster. But, over the last few years. Evidence has emerged that the influence of our gut microbiome, goes much much further. It might even talk directly to our brain. We've observed a few curious things, 90% of our body's serotonin, an important messenger substance for nerve cells, is produced in the gut. Some scientists think the microbiome does this, to communicate with the vagus nerve. The information highway of our nervous system. Other examples are bacteria that stimulate immune cells in the gut, so they send a kind of alarm signal to the brain. Here, it activates immune cells that help the brain recover from injuries. Since the brain decides what we eat, the microbiome is interested in a healthy brain. A new field of science is opening up here, and we're just on the verge of understanding how these complex systems inside our bodies interact. But we are starting to see how much our microbiome actually influences us and our behavior. Take depression for example, Healthy rats fed microbes from the guts of depressed people, began showing anxiety-like behavior, and symptoms that look like depression. And in early 2017, a study linked the microbiome to intelligence, by connecting a certain set up of bacteria in newborns, with better motor and language skills. But it might also influence our daily lives. Tests with fruit flies, showed that their microbiome, influenced what kinds of food they craved. This could mean your microbes are able to tell your brain, which food it should get them. Although, this is not a one-way street The seed for our microbiome comes from our mother, but how it develops and changes, is determined by what we eat. the organisms in our gut feed on different things, some like fibers and leafy greens, others go for sugars and starches, and some love greasy fries and butter. Our gut is like a garden in which we constantly decide, what will grow and blossom. If we eat healthily, we breed bacteria that like healthy food. If we eat a lot of fast food, then we breed fast food loving bacteria. Life is hard, so we can get trapped in a vicious circle. You have a stressful time, and eat lots of burgers and fries and pizza. This is awesome for fast food bacteria, they multiply and multiply, and take up space from vegetable loving bacteria. But even worse, they send signals to the brain to continue what it's doing. this makes you want more fast food. Which breeds more fast food bacteria, which makes you crave fast food, and so on. This kind of self-reinforcing cycle, could play a huge role in obesity. But, it's important to stress that you can fight this process, and reverse it, by eating healthily and breeding more good bacteria. Beyond weight gain, our microbiome has also been linked to other serious diseases like autism, schizophrenia, and cancer. One of the earliest symptoms of Parkinson's, is actually gut problems. If your body is overrun with bacteria that harm you, there is often only one solution. You bring in an army of good guys. That's very easy, You just transplant some healthy poop. You do that by literally transferring poop, from a healthy person, into your gut. This method is already used, to cure diarrhea that's caused when C. difficile bacteria, take over a gut microbiome. But we just don't know enough about the complex interplay at work here yet. For example, a transplant from an overweight donor cured a woman's diarrhea, but contributed to her obesity down the line. This caused some ways and another study tried to reverse the effect. Poop transplants from slim people to obese ones, gave them a more diverse microbiome, and made them less sensitive to insulin. Both things that also happen when people lose weight We need to do a lot more science, to really understand how our microbes make us healthy or sick. But, whether we like it or not. We need our microbiome, and it needs us. We'll never have our bodies to ourselves. But we have gained a powerful ally, if we can just keep the peace.
Info
Channel: Kurzgesagt ā€“ In a Nutshell
Views: 4,820,513
Rating: 4.9626555 out of 5
Keywords: microbiome, bacteria, gut, virus, fungus, microorganism, brain, obese, poop transplant, funny, kids, animation
Id: VzPD009qTN4
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 7min 38sec (458 seconds)
Published: Thu Oct 05 2017
Reddit Comments

Had a poo transplant myself about a year ago. I had an antibiotic resistant strain of bacteria (mentioned in the video - clostridium difficile) causing an infection in my gut and was on the toilet 20 times a day, couldnt leave my house. The transplant cured the infection that I'd had for over 9 months! My gut is still pretty bad now but at least I can get out and about compared to then.

šŸ‘ļøŽ︎ 218 šŸ‘¤ļøŽ︎ u/Spectorials šŸ“…ļøŽ︎ Oct 05 2017 šŸ—«︎ replies

While I was getting my microbio degree I took a class entirely about the microbiome. There's a few things this video missed or didn't explain that I'd like to expand on.

1: The section on microbiome acquisition:

Fetuses being sterile until birth is highly debated by microbiologists. But it's definitely true that c-section has an effect on the baby's microbiome. This video didn't explain why, but the reason is this: If you pass through the birth canal, you are innoculated by your mothers vaginal and fecal microbiome. These microbiomes are pretty close to a gut microbiome and are good for seeding a new one. But a c-section baby's first innoculum will be from the mother's skin microbiome when the baby is breastfed. The skin microbiome is NOT similar to the gut, and those kinds of bacteria are not the kind you want inside you. This is what creates problems and has been linked to many different autoimmune problems. This problem can be (and is) prevented by swabbing the mother's taint and rubbing it on the baby's face immediately following birth.

2: I feel like the video focused almost exclusively on the gut microbiome. And, fair enough, it's definitely the most important. But there are other interesting microbiomes! Your hands, your cell phone, your kitchen sink, EVERYTHING has a microbiome and all of them are interesting.

3: Fecal transplants, as well as any other microbiome transplant, only works if you're cleaned out first. You have to take hardcore antibiotics to reduce your bacterial count to low enough that new ones have a place to land. Furthermore, fecal transplants are usually taken orally via delayed release pills, not literally shoved up the back end. (EDIT: seems like someone in the comments DID get the transplant via enema, whoops. Also antibiotics aren't required, although they are typically used.)

The microbiome is fascinating, but it's already starting to fall into the realm of hype science. The amount of fake science marketted as probiotics and prebiotics is staggering. I've seen companies try to sell literal dirt as an acne remedy because it's "treating your face's microbiome with soil bacteria." Yeah no.

OK I'm done. Good video as always, but there's so much more to talk about than what this video covered.

šŸ‘ļøŽ︎ 151 šŸ‘¤ļøŽ︎ u/Vibriofischeri šŸ“…ļøŽ︎ Oct 05 2017 šŸ—«︎ replies

How have i never heard of these shit-transplants who the fuck came up with that.

šŸ‘ļøŽ︎ 51 šŸ‘¤ļøŽ︎ u/EliahBernick šŸ“…ļøŽ︎ Oct 05 2017 šŸ—«︎ replies

Its nice watching a Kurzgesagt video without experiencing a suspicion of impending doom afterwards.

šŸ‘ļøŽ︎ 111 šŸ‘¤ļøŽ︎ u/wade822 šŸ“…ļøŽ︎ Oct 05 2017 šŸ—«︎ replies

I read about this a couple of years ago, promptly had my mind blown, then decided to put the theory to the test: I switched my diet to pure raw vegan for 3 months just to see what effect it would have on my cravings. Here's what I found:

  1. My pre-experiment diet was pretty standard: meat and carbs for most meals, with plenty of sugary snacks here and there. Office job with no exercise meant that I was a bit squishy - not sporting a gut or a double chin thanks to my height, but definitely in 'big guy' territory.
  2. Absurd weight loss, without exercise. No matter how much uncooked or fermented plant matter I ate, I simply could not match my basal metabolic rate. I'm a tall guy (191cm), so your results may vary, but I was losing about 1kg every 2 days. In total I dropped 35kg (from 110kg, to 75kg) in about 10 weeks (I stopped 2 weeks early because I didn't want to keep losing weight). Turns out a lot of the nutritional benefit of food is unlocked by cooking it, so eating everything raw meant I was only getting part of the energy payload from the food.
  3. For the first month, I was always uncomfortably hungry, even if I filled up on greens until I couldn't eat anymore, I'd still feel hungry. Raw nuts and extremely spicy food helped the most, homemade kimchi was a lifesaving technicality.
  4. By the end I actually had adjusted to the new diet, the omnipresent hunger and dissatisfaction went away, and I actually relished a lot of the various raw vegan meals I'd learned.
  5. After lifting the diet and going back to just eating whatever I wanted, I did find a difference in what I craved:
    • Meat still tasted nice, and I still wanted it, but way less was satisfactory.
    • Less food in general, actually ā€“ smaller portions were more satisfying.
    • Sugar was the biggest difference. This whole thing was 2 years ago, and to this day I can't stand sugary shit.
    • Greens did taste better, too, and could happily form the basis of any given meal.
  6. My weight stabilised around 85kg, where it's stayed since, give or take 5kg.

All in all I'd say my anecdotal experience confirms the idea that my gut biome was pulling some strings. The extreme diet did seem to reset/repopulate the bacteria therein to some extent, with lasting changes on what I crave and find tasty.

šŸ‘ļøŽ︎ 22 šŸ‘¤ļøŽ︎ u/BKLaughton šŸ“…ļøŽ︎ Oct 05 2017 šŸ—«︎ replies

Well, it's like another world inside the body.

šŸ‘ļøŽ︎ 6 šŸ‘¤ļøŽ︎ u/notthurgoodmagee šŸ“…ļøŽ︎ Oct 05 2017 šŸ—«︎ replies

This gives "you are what you eat" a whole other meaning.

šŸ‘ļøŽ︎ 7 šŸ‘¤ļøŽ︎ u/AskMeIfImAReptiloid šŸ“…ļøŽ︎ Oct 05 2017 šŸ—«︎ replies

Most under appreciated YouTube channel ever Iā€™d show this to my kids in school

šŸ‘ļøŽ︎ 3 šŸ‘¤ļøŽ︎ u/danksouls666 šŸ“…ļøŽ︎ Oct 05 2017 šŸ—«︎ replies

Graphtreon creator here. Congrats to Kurzgesagt the #4 most popular Patreon.

šŸ‘ļøŽ︎ 8 šŸ‘¤ļøŽ︎ u/countdownnet šŸ“…ļøŽ︎ Oct 05 2017 šŸ—«︎ replies
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.