Cedars-Sinai’s David Underhill, the immunologist who led the team, said that studying the function of the fungal species that inhabit the human gut is an emerging field. “There’s not a whole lot out there at this point,” he told Wired Science. “People have understood that fungi are there, but that’s been a relatively vague notion.”
Underhill and his colleagues performed experiments
with a mouse model that carried immune deficiencies that specifically made the
animals unable to clear fungal cells from their systems. The mice developed
colitis-like symptoms but recovered when the researchers gave them an
antifungal drug. They then made the link to humans by discovering that many of
the patients with severe colitis at Cedars-Sinai had similar gene-mediated
immune deficiencies along with a suite of internal fungal species.
Many
questions about the role of the internal fungal community remain to be
answered, according to Underhill. “People study [the microbiome's effect on
human health] in the context of the gut bacteria, in the context of viruses in
our microflora,” he told Wired. “You can map all those questions to fungi.”Source: Wired Science
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario