The Indian Human Microbiome Project has been launched in the north eastern region to provide a fertile ground for discovery of new drugs and pharmaceuticals.
This will also give a new understanding of the mutual relationship between humans and associated micro-organisms, director of the Institute of Bioresources and Sustainable Development, Manipur, Prof Dinabandhu Sahoo said after inaugurating the project at Imphal yesterday.
"India is a country with different ethnic groups living in different agro-climatic zones with different food habits and cultural practice. This puts India in a unique position for the mapping of the human microbiome", an IBSD release said today quoting Sahoo.
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"For example, a gram of stool contains about 100 billion bacteria, 100 million viruses, a million spores of fungi and also 100 million microbes known as Archaea as well as 10 million cells from the gut lining.
The organisms which will be isolated from the stool, saliva, skin and other parts of the body will be studied", he said.
With increasing human population and urbanisation as well as changing lifestyle and food habits, the people across the world are facing new challenges in terms of their health and new types of diseases, he said.
"This will be a major global burden in terms of loss of productivity and increasing health costs in the coming years. Therefore, researchers and big companies around the world are looking for new drugs and pharmaceuticals to cure various diseases investing billions of dollars", he said.
It has been found that the micro-organisms, mainly bacteria, which are present in human body can be very good sources of new drugs which can cure several kinds of diseases, said the director of the national institute of the union Department of Biotechnology (DBT).
"The human body is inhabited by 10 times more micro-organisms (mainly bacteria) than the total number of cells present in our own body. These microbes contribute 360 times more genes than humans' own genes, which play a key role in human physiology and development", Sahoo said.
"The trillions of microbes in and on our body contribute for many aspects of our health - from digesting different foods and making essential vitamins and also help in boosting our immune system and protect us from different pathogens", said Sahoo.
Realising the importance of these micro-organisms, the United States of America has launched 'The Human Microbiome Project' (HMP) at a cost of 215 million dollars followed by a similar project in Europe, the release said.
These efforts led to a strong foundation to understand the impact of the human microbiome on human health and disease which range from neo-natal health, gastro-intestinal disorders, rheumatoid arthritis, diseases associated with skin, lung, liver, urogenital tract, neurological disorders, cancer to lifestyle associated diseases like obesity and diabetes.
Dr Shekhar C Mande, Director of National Centre for Cell Sciences (NCCS), Pune, also a national institute of the DBT , is a partner of the project. He said this new joint initiative would unravel several new scientific information about various aspects of the north eastern region.
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