
The Invisible Creatures That Keep You Alive!
Season 4 Episode 43 | 5m 23sVideo has Closed Captions
A complete microbiome lives inside us, and believe it or not, that's a good thing.
A complete microbiome lives inside us, and believe it or not, that's a good thing.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback

The Invisible Creatures That Keep You Alive!
Season 4 Episode 43 | 5m 23sVideo has Closed Captions
A complete microbiome lives inside us, and believe it or not, that's a good thing.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship[SHOW OPENING MUSIC] Teleport every one of your cells into the next room, and youd leave a strange shadow behind.
celled creatures that live on and inside your body.
om e. Zoom in and we can see this cloud is made of bacteria, fungi, and others Like these in the gut, that digest fiber and give us nutrients we cant make ourselves.
Or these, that munch our skin oils and give off our characteristic body odors.
Even the film of plaque we brush off your teeth was put there by microbes.
Youre teeming with microscopic life.
er e. Without you to sustain and contain it, your microbiome is rapidly dying, and without it, over in the next room, so are you.
From your first day on Earth, these microbes helped build, protect, and feed you, and on your last day, theyll be the first to take you apart.
When multi-cellular life arrived on Earth, microbes had been here for more than one and a half billion years.
rally every complex creature to come after, from jellyfish to dinosaurs, termites to trees, koalas to us, has learned to work with them.
But what happens when we try to live without them?
You might think that fewer bugs means fewer diseases, but its not that simple.
Cleaner isnt always healthier.
Which bug we meet, and when we encounter it, makes a huge difference in who we become.
In the 1970s, a Canadian doctor noticed that local indigenous children were less likely to get asthma and allergies than the white population, despite getting more infections.
Later, a British doctor saw less hay fever allergy in children who had older siblings.
It seemed like kids who grew up in more hygienic environments ended up with immune systems wired to attack stuff like pollen and household chemicals as if they were dangerous germs.
This is the hygiene hypothesis, it says growing up around a less diverse bunch of microbes can make our immune systems kinda jumpy and nervous later in life.
Today, our food is safer, our water is treated, we have smaller families trading fewer germs, we even live around fewer animals.
One scientist analyzed household dust and found that homes with cats or dogs have more varied microbes.
As adults, our immune systems protect us by calling on a library of past infections, but when were babies, that library is empty.
This isnt because a baby doesnt have their own immune system yet, like many people are taught, its because for the first few months after theyre born, a baby actively keeps its immune system turned off, to create an opening for the bodys first microbes to move in.
Our mothers give us our first dose.
The trip down the birth canal seeds a newborn with many of their first microbes.
But in some countries, a quarter to half of babies are born by C-section instead of vaginal birth, and these babies first microbes naturally resemble whats on the skin instead.
This isnt necessarily a bad thing, but its definitely different than how its is to ry.
But the biggest influence on an infants inner inhabitants is our most mammalian trait of all: Breast milk.
Milk is one of natures most amazing liquid innovations.
Its full of energy for growing brains and bodies, but the babys not the only one st -a bundanget ttiningrg edfeied.nt in human milk are complex sugars called oligosaccharides.
But newborns cant digest these.
Why do mothers waste good energy filling breast milk with undigestible stuff?
Its food for microbes!
Those sugars pass all the way to the large intestine, where they meet a special bacterium, which, by the way, was also donated by mom.
This single microbe can make up 90% of the bacterial population in an infants gut, and it loves to eat HMOs.
They digest those complex molecules and in return feed the baby special fatty acids, even donate a nutrient needed in growing brains.
Later, when we switch to solid food, these bacteria become minor players, but they play a starring role early on.
Those sticky, tangled sugar molecules also act as a physical defense, tangling up dangerous invaders in a kind of defensive glue.
Breast milk is even loaded with bacteria-killing viruses, ready to target the bad guys and leave good microbes unharmed.
Infants that drink formula clearly grow up fine.
Just like C-section vs traditional birth, formula isnt bad, its just different, and scientists want to know if these subtle differences early on can lead to big effects later.
ssing down microbes throughout the animal kingdom.
Before a Beewolf wasp mom leaves her egg, she lines the nest with a sticky white paste secreted from her head.
obes in the paste secrete antibiotics to keep the nest free of infections.
it h her foWhren i ts tiwhmeen f sorhe b labayy s kohealr asow n eggs.to give up milk and start eating eucalyptus leaves, its mother releases a fluid called pap from well, let's just say it's not from her mouth... the youngster eats right up.
of microbes that the koala needs to digest leaves.
Its clear that these first doses of microbial life are some of the most important.
Some of them take up residence to nourish and protect us, some of them just pass on through, to help our bodies learn friend from foe.
For most of the microbes that live in and on us, we still dont know how they interact with our own cells, or each other.
What IS clear is that without them, we wouldnt be us.
Stay curious


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