Tuesday, May 23, 2017

Probiotics And Mitochondria: Bacteria Are Not “Other”

Probiotics And Mitochondria: Bacteria Are Not


The close symbiotic relationship between our bodies and intestinal bacteria is so profound that some scientists have suggested we be viewed as “meta-organisms.”


Indeed, without these friendly bacteria we could not perform critical life-sustaining functions, such as:



Probiotics also perform at least 35 essential biological functions, with 17 viewable below:


Probiotics And Mitochondria: Bacteria Are Not


Beyond these remarkable properties, probiotics have been empirically confirmed to prevent and/or ameliorate well over 200 disease conditions and/or symptoms of imbalance, indicating that they are indispensable to our health in ways we are only beginning to understand.


We Have The Ancient Vestiges of Bacteria Within Our Cells


A fundamental symbiosis with bacteria is built into the very infrastructure of our bodies, as exemplified by the evolutionary origin of mitochondria, which are the little “power houses” of our cells.  Mitochondria, in fact, have their own DNA and that DNA is only passed down through the mother’s mitochondria via the maternal germ cell cytoplasm.


The mitochondrial DNA is circular like bacterial DNA, and the mitochondrial ribosomes and transfer RNA are also similar to those of bacteria, as well as other components of its membrane. The genetic sequences of mitochondria also clearly indicate an origin from a group of bacteria called the alpha-Proteobacteria.


These facts have lead researchers to the “endosymbiotic theory,” which proposes that mitochondria were once bacteria living outside of us and which gave up their independence by becoming organelles within an ancient proto-cell that evolved into the eukaryotic cells that presently make up our bodies; were it not for this ancient symbiotic marriage we would not be here today.


Ultimately, our bodies tell a very different story of our origins and need for cooperation with other cellular communities (i.e. probiotics) than the human ego, and its various anthropocentric explanations of who we are and where we came from. Because probiotics come from other living organisms (i.e. they cover and permeate the fruits, vegetables, animals we eat), and their health (and the health of their environment, e.g. soil, water, air) is indispensable in ensuring healthy probiotic communities flourish within these “foods,” it is no longer possible to separate out our health and destiny from that of the environment, and the planet as a whole.


We also need to understand that antibiotics (literally: “against life”) — both in prescription drug form and in the form of thousands of manmade chemicals that kill microbial life — have devastating consequences to probiotics (literally: “for life”) when used indiscriminately or unconsciously (fluoridation and chlorination of water, or the bacteria-destroying use of Roundup on a mass scale.).


The root of our health is dependent on the fragile, necessary, and timeless relationship between vast populations of these microscopic ‘beings’ without which we ourselves can not be whole, healthy and (w)holy implanted with a sense of sacredness, in our bodies and souls.


©  May 23, 2017 GreenMedInfo LLC. This work is reproduced and distributed with the permission of GreenMedInfo LLC. Want to learn more from GreenMedInfo? Sign up for the newsletter here http://www.greenmedinfo.com/greenmed/newsletter.

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