Some bacteria in our intestines back at least five million years, well before we became human. These are the findings revealed Thursday by a study.
This finding suggests that evolution plays a greater role in the composition of the intestinal microbiota than previously thought, say the researchers. Their work is published in the journal Science.
These bacteria contribute to the early development of our intestines, cause our immune system to combat pathogens and could even affect our mood and behavior, they specify .
Two divisions
“We show with this research that some human intestinal bacteria directly descended from those who lived in the bowels of our common ancestors with monkeys, “says Andrew Moeller, a researcher from the University of California, Berkeley.
” This proves that there is an unbroken lineage of these bacteria for millions of years, since the emergence African apes, “says one, a co-author.
So that humans and apes evolved into distinct species from a common ancestor, the bacteria in intestines of the latter have also evolved into different strains, these scientists have determined.
various species
They found genetic evidence that evolution separated from these bacteria in different strains occurred when the common ancestors began to evolve into different species. And the first cleavage of intestinal bacteria occurred there are about 15.6 million years ago when the gorilla lineage diverged from that of other hominids.
The second separation occurred ago 5.3 million years when the human branch split from those of chimpanzees and bonobos. “We knew long ago that humans and our closest relatives, the great apes, have these bacteria in their intestines,” notes Andrew Moeller.
“The biggest question we set out to answer was that to know where these bacteria, our environment or our evolution, and how long the lines persisted, “he added.
like evolution
for this research, the scientists analyzed fecal samples from chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas living in the wild in Africa and people in the United States. Fossil and genetic evidence has shown that these four hominid species have all evolved from a common ancestor who lived there more than ten million years.
Researchers used genetic sequencing to analyze all the different versions of a bacterial gene present in all fecal samples. From these data, they were able to reconstruct the tree of evolution of the three groups of intestinal bacteria that make up more than 20% of the human microbiome. Two of these groups have a similar pattern to that of hominids. (ats / nxp)
(Created: 7/24/2016, 1:25)
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