生物
人口
微生物学
寄主(生物学)
细菌
共生
消亡
微生物群
免疫系统
生态学
免疫学
遗传学
政治学
社会学
人口学
法学
作者
Bruce R. Levin,Rustom Antia
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2001-05-11
卷期号:292 (5519): 1112-1115
被引量:96
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.1058879
摘要
To pathogenic microparasites (viruses, bacteria, protozoa, or fungi), we and other mammals (living organisms at large) are little more than soft, thin-walled flasks of culture media. Almost every time we eat, brush our teeth, scrape our skin, have sex, get bitten by insects, and inhale, we are confronted with populations of microbes that are capable of colonizing the mucosa lining our orifices and alimentary tract and proliferating in fluids and cells within us. Nevertheless, we rarely get sick, much less succumb to these infections. The massive numbers of bacteria and other micro- and not-so-micro organisms that abound and replicate in our alimentary tract and cover our skin and the mucosa lining our orifices normally maintain their communities in seemingly peaceful coexistence with the somatic cells that define us. Why don't these microbes invade and proliferate in the culture media within the soft, thin-walled flask that envelops us? Why don't they cause disease and lead to our rapid demise?
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