Microbes and humans

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Deleted member 62875

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Microorganisms are ebiquitors In nature meaning they are found everywhere in nature, In lakes human body,food we eat, water we drink all from our environment.
Most of the microbes are useful to human kind and few are pathogenic ,even,with solidified biology and biotechnology the pathogenic ones are engineerd to non pathogenic and be used in health sectors and industries.microbes are used in medicine for preparation of vaccines and drugs that drives either synthetic,semisynthetically.microbes play vital roles In maintaining environment bioactivity.microorganisms are not be be played with even when know some are harmful, microbiologist and scientist are updated and regularly awake
 
Microbes are everywhere, on our skin and in the air. I'm talking about bacteria, viruses and other tiny organisms. Your body is covered with them. In fact, if you took all your microbes and added them up, they would weigh as much as your liver -- more than four pounds.

In the gut, billions of microbes help break down food, producing nutrients that we convert into energy. One way the microbes do this is by fermenting undigested foods and dietary fibers. The microbes' "leftovers," (liquid and solid), are then excreted from the body or absorbed in special cells lining the intestine.




What are microbes? Microbes are living organisms that are too small to be seen with the naked eye ranging from 1 micrometer (1/1000mm) to 1000 micrometers in size. Most of the microorganisms found in the environment and on the human body cannot be grown easily in pure culture. Therefore, they are difficult to study and understand in detail. As a consequence, some popular misconceptions exist about their nature and mode of action.



The human body has some 30 trillion cells and bacteria that work with it. Of these, there are 10 trillion human cells and 1 trillion microbes. Biological interactions between humans and microbes or between microbes themselves form a vast "microbial ecology", most of which is located in the gut
 
Are you a microbiologist?
Microbes are everywhere, on our skin and in the air. I'm talking about bacteria, viruses and other tiny organisms. Your body is covered with them. In fact, if you took all your microbes and added them up, they would weigh as much as your liver -- more than four pounds.

In the gut, billions of microbes help break down food, producing nutrients that we convert into energy. One way the microbes do this is by fermenting undigested foods and dietary fibers. The microbes' "leftovers," (liquid and solid), are then excreted from the body or absorbed in special cells lining the intestine.




What are microbes? Microbes are living organisms that are too small to be seen with the naked eye ranging from 1 micrometer (1/1000mm) to 1000 micrometers in size. Most of the microorganisms found in the environment and on the human body cannot be grown easily in pure culture. Therefore, they are difficult to study and understand in detail. As a consequence, some popular misconceptions exist about their nature and mode of action.



The human body has some 30 trillion cells and bacteria that work with it. Of these, there are 10 trillion human cells and 1 trillion microbes. Biological interactions between humans and microbes or between microbes themselves form a vast "microbial ecology", most of which is located in the gut
That is awesome, are you a microbiologist
 
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