生物
微生物群
传输(电信)
共生
疾病
殖民抵抗
寄主(生物学)
生态学
殖民地化
遗传学
细菌
医学
病理
电气工程
工程类
作者
Amar Sarkar,Cameron J.A. McInroy,Siobhán Harty,Aura Raulo,Neil G.O. Ibata,Mireia Vallés-Colomer,Katerina V.‐A. Johnson,Ilana Brito,Joseph Henrich,Elizabeth A. Archie,Luis B. Barreiro,Francesca S. Gazzaniga,B. Brett Finlay,Eugene V. Koonin,Rachel N. Carmody,Andrew H. Moeller
出处
期刊:Cell
[Elsevier]
日期:2024-01-01
卷期号:187 (1): 17-43
被引量:13
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cell.2023.12.014
摘要
Although social interactions are known to drive pathogen transmission, the contributions of socially transmissible host-associated mutualists and commensals to host health and disease remain poorly explored. We use the concept of the social microbiome—the microbial metacommunity of a social network of hosts—to analyze the implications of social microbial transmission for host health and disease. We investigate the contributions of socially transmissible microbes to both eco-evolutionary microbiome community processes (colonization resistance, the evolution of virulence, and reactions to ecological disturbance) and microbial transmission-based processes (transmission of microbes with metabolic and immune effects, inter-specific transmission, transmission of antibiotic-resistant microbes, and transmission of viruses). We consider the implications of social microbial transmission for communicable and non-communicable diseases and evaluate the importance of a socially transmissible component underlying canonically non-communicable diseases. The social transmission of mutualists and commensals may play a significant, under-appreciated role in the social determinants of health and may act as a hidden force in social evolution.
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