Parker, W. and Ollerton, J. (2013) Evolutionary biology and anthropology suggest biome reconstitution as a necessary approach toward dealing with immune disorders. Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health. 2013(1) 2050-6201.
- Texts
- Information
- 5774:6256
5774:6256
Parker20135774.pdf
- Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Information
Abstract:
Industrialized society currently faces a wide range of non-infectious, immune-related pandemics. These pandemics include a variety of autoimmune, inflammatory and allergic diseases that are often associated with common environmental triggers and with genetic predisposition, but that do not occur in developing societies. In this review, we briefly present the idea that these pandemics are due to a limited number of evolutionary mismatches, the most damaging being ‘biome depletion’. This particular mismatch involves the loss of species from the ecosystem of the human body, the human biome, many of which have traditionally been classified as parasites, although some may actually be commensal or even mutualistic. This view, evolved from the ‘hygiene hypothesis’, encompasses a broad ecological and evolutionary perspective that considers host-symbiont relations as plastic, changing through ecological space and evolutionary time. Fortunately, this perspective provides a blueprint, termed 'biome reconstitution', for disease treatment and especially for disease prevention. Biome reconstitution includes the controlled and population-wide reintroduction (i.e. domestication) of selected species that have been all but eradicated from the human biome in industrialized society and holds great promise for the elimination of pandemics of allergic, inflammatory and autoimmune diseases.
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/good_health_and_well_being
Creators:
Parker, W. and Ollerton, J.
Faculties, Divisions and Institutes:
Date:
1 January 2013
Date Type:
Publication
Journal or Publication Title:
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health
Volume:
2013
Number:
1
Language:
English
DOI:
ISSN:
2050-6201
Status:
Published / Disseminated
Refereed:
Yes
Related URLs:
![]() |