Conceptualizing Human Microbiota: From Multicelled Organ to Ecological Community

  • Foxman B
  • Goldberg D
  • Murdock C
  • et al.
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Abstract

The microbiota of a typical, healthy human contains 10 times as many cells as the human body and incorporates bacteria, viruses, archea, protozoans, and fungi. This diverse microbiome (the collective genomes of the microbial symbionts that inhabit a human host) is essential for human functioning. We discuss the unstated assumptions and implications of current conceptualizations of human microbiota: (1) a single unit that interacts with the host and the external environment; a multicelled organ; (2) an assemblage of multiple taxa, but considered as a single unit in its interactions with the host; (3) an assemblage of multiple taxa, which each interacts with the host and the environment independently; and (4) a dynamic ecological community consisting of multiple taxa each potentially interacting with each other, the host, and the environment. Each conceptualization leads to different predictions, methodologies, and research strategies.

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Foxman, B., Goldberg, D., Murdock, C., Xi, C., & Gilsdorf, J. R. (2008). Conceptualizing Human Microbiota: From Multicelled Organ to Ecological Community. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Infectious Diseases, 2008, 1–5. https://doi.org/10.1155/2008/613979

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