“We wanted to know what variables influence the microbial ecosystems in our homes, and the biggest difference we’ve found so far is whether you own a dog,” says Dr. Rob Dunn, co-author of the study. “For example, there are bacteria normally found in soil that are 700 times more common in dog-owning households than in those without dogs.”
The researchers gave 40 families a home-sampling kit and asked them to swab nine locations within the home: a kitchen cutting board, a kitchen counter, a refrigerator shelf, a toilet seat, a pillowcase, a television screen, the main door’s exterior handle and the upper trim on both an interior door and an exterior door.
The researchers then collected DNA to see which organisms were present. All told, the 40 homes harbored 7,726 different types of bacteria, with each location harboring its own unique bacteria. “We leave a microbial ‘fingerprint’ on everything we touch,” Dunn says. “Sometimes those microbes come from our skin, sometimes they’re oral bacteria and — as often as not — they’re human fecal bacteria.”
Dunn and his colleagues then looked for variables that would alter bacterial communities from home to home, such as cats or children. The only one they found that made any difference was whether or not the family had a dog. According to the findings, pillowcases and TV screens of dog-owners had 42 percent and 52 percent, respectively, more microbial groups compared to those of non-dog-owners.
But all those extra microbes may be good for your health, the scientists say. Prior research has found that women who have a dog in the home when pregnant are less likely to have children with allergies. Researchers suspect this is likely to due to the boost the immune system gets from being exposed to greater numbers of microbes.
~ Courtesy of Times Live
Tags: Allergies, bacteria, dog-related microbes, immune system, Microbes