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Trillions of microbes live in the intestines of a healthy person, helping to digest foods.
Because there are so many trillions of microbes in the gut, the vast majority of the genes that a person carries around are more microbial than human.
Thanks to recent scientific breakthroughs, researchers have started to examine the permanent residents of our guts – the trillions of microbes, bacteria and fungi that digest our food, produce vitamins and regulate our immune systems.
Other scientists, led by a group of microbiologists at Washington University in St . Louis are looking at the actions of the trillions of microbes that live in everyone's gut, to see whether certain intestinal microbes may be making their hosts fat.
When curious researchers armed with cotton swabs and strong stomachs sequence DNA from microorganisms gathered from our armpits, belly buttons, and various other locales, both inside and outside us, they find miniature versions of ecosystems like those in rain forests and meadows, composed of trillions of microbes.
Among those given antibiotics between 6 and 14 months, there was no link to body mass in childhood, but exposure from 15 to 23 months was linked to higher body mass index at age 7. Antibiotics change the composition of the microbiome, the trillions of microbes that inhabit the body, and this, researchers say, may help explain the result.
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Trillion of microbes (bacteria, fungi, virus and protozoa) take residence on and in our bodies.
And I don't see any counterparty of size that could absorb, you know, trillions and trillions of–.
Bacteria aren't all bad in fact, our bodies are full of trillions of beneficial microbes.
Scientists from the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration briefed us that the trillions of oil-eating microbes that Mother Nature has deployed throughout the Gulf of Mexico continue to provide by far the most cost effective cleanup work that's being done in the Gulf.
The human gastrointestinal tract (GIT) is home to trillions of finely tuned, interacting microbes, which are defined as the gut microbiota.
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