Commensal bacteria were critical shapers of early human populations

Tuesday, December 16, 2014 - 17:30 in Biology & Nature

Using mathematical modeling, researchers have shown that commensal bacteria that cause problems later in life most likely played a key role in stabilizing early human populations. The finding offers an explanation as to why humans co-evolved with microbes that can cause or contribute to cancer, inflammation, and degenerative diseases of aging.

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