Medical Hypotheses
Volume 74, Issue 2 , Pages 214-215, February 2010

The human superorganism – Of microbes and men

Department of Biological Sciences, Cork Institute of Technology, Bishopstown, Rossa Avenue, Cork, Ireland

Alimentary Pharmabiotic Centre, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland Tel.: +353 (0)21 4326885; fax: +00 353 21 4328851

Received 11 August 2009; accepted 14 August 2009. published online 16 October 2009.

Summary 

Albert Einstein once said that “The true value of a human being can be found in the degree to which he has attained liberation from the self”. For years our traditional view of ‘self’ was restricted to our own bodies; composed of eukaryote cells encoded by our genome. However, in the era of omics technologies and systems biology, this view now extends beyond the traditional limitations of our own core being to include our resident microbial communities. These prokaryote cells outnumber our own cells by a factor of ten and contain at least ten times more DNA than our own genome. In exchange for food and shelter, this symbiont provides us, the host, with metabolic functions far beyond the scope of our own physiological capabilities. In this respect the human body can be considered a superorganism; a communal group of human and microbial cells all working for the benefit of the collective – a view which most certainly attains liberation from self.

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PII: S0306-9877(09)00658-6

doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2009.08.047

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 74, Issue 2 , Pages 214-215, February 2010