Most of the cells in your body are not your own, nor are they even human. They are bacterial. From the invisible strands of fungi waiting to sprout between our toes, to the kilogram of bacterial matter in our guts, we are best viewed as walking "superorganisms," highly complex conglomerations of human, fungal, bacterial and viral cells.
That's the view of scientists at Imperial College London who published a paper in Nature Biotechnology describing how these microbes interact with the body. Understanding the workings of the superorganism, they say, is crucial to the development of personalized medicine and health care in the future because individuals can have very different responses to drugs, depending on their microbial fauna.
-warphead.com
JessicaSmith
Pro
Have you read A Short History of Nearly Everything...in there it talks about the fact that the molecules that make our body have been many things and will be many things in the future! Fascinating when you start to think...as for the bacterial side! Just before breakfast puts me off lol