Reuters/Manfred
Rohde
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The sets of microbes people
carry in their bodies are as unique as fingerprints, a new study shows. So law
enforcers may be provided with yet another tool for identifying criminal
suspect.
Researchers
from the Harvard School of Public Health studied the stool, saliva, skin and
other bodily sites from 242 individuals over a one-year period. The scientists
eventually came to the conclusion that it is possible to identify someone from
their microbiomes – the variety of microbes people carry in their bodies. The
findings were published in the PNAS journal.
RT.com reports:
“Right
now, it’s a little bit of a Wild West as far as microbiome data management
goes,” Curtis Huttenhower, from Harvard University, who led the study, said in
a press release. “As the field develops, we need to make sure there’s a
realization that our microbiomes are highly unique.”
The
results showed that the microbiome codes from each person were unique and that
a person’s “microbial community” remained stable over the whole period it was
studied. The codes constructed from gut samples were particularly stable. The
researchers found more than 80 percent of the individuals were recognizable up
to a year after the sampling period had ended.
“Linking
a human DNA sample to a database of human DNA ‘fingerprints’ is the basis for
forensic genetics, which is now a decades-old field. We’ve shown that the same
sort of linking is possible using DNA sequences from microbes inhabiting the
human body—no human DNA required,” said lead author Eric Franzosa.
“This
opens the door to connecting human microbiome samples between databases, which
has the potential to expose sensitive subject information—for example, a
sexually-transmitted infection, detectable from the microbiome sample itself,”
he added.
Mark
Gerstein, from Yale University, who wasn’t involved in the study, believes the
discovery could be used to track terrorists. This could be achieved by looking
for microbe traces they leave behind, for example in caves and other remote
places.
Your gut #microbiome
has a unique personal signature. (Image
source: Eric Topol @EricTopol )
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It
is not known how well the algorithm will work if it is exposed to a larger
section of the population. However, the researchers say their code would be
able to pick somebody out of a group of between 500 to 1000 people. “I would
expect that number to get bigger in the future as we get more data and better
data and better coding strategies,” Huttenhower said.
However,
the discovery could raise potential privacy concerns for those involved in the
research projects.
“Although
the potential for any data privacy concerns from purely microbial DNA is very
low, it’s important for researchers to know that such issues are theoretically
possible,” said Huttenhower.
“Perhaps even more exciting
are the implications of the study for microbial ecology, since it suggests our
unique microbial residents are tuned to the environment of our body—our genetics,
diet, and developmental history—in such a way that they stick with us and help
to fend off less-friendly microbial invaders over time,” Huttenhower added.
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