Skin: Difference between revisions

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===Physical Conditions===
===Physical Conditions===
What are the conditions in your niche?  Temperature, pressure, pH, moisture, etc.
What are the conditions in your niche?  Temperature, pressure, pH, moisture, etc.
Skin '''temperature''' of the skin varies depending on the location on the body. Toes and fingers tend to have the lowest temperatures, while the axillae and the groin tend to have the highest (1). The temperatures are usually 25-35 degrees Celcius, which is ideal for mesophiles rather than thermophiles or psychrophiles (1). The temperature only varies slightly so it there is not a dramatic selection for microbes colonizing certain areas, but does affect the growth rate of the microbes present. (1)
The '''moisture''' content on the skin is generally low, which limits the survival and growth of microbes. However, the eccrine glands can produce sweat, which increases the moisture on the surface of the skin; especially in areas where evaporation does not occur easily, such as the toes and axillae (1). Microbes tend to have greater populations in those occluded areas since there is an accumulation of secretions. (1)
The skin generally has a high '''oxygen concentration''', so it acts primarily as an aerobic environment for anaerobes to grow (1). However, the hair follicles inside the skin provide a microaerophillic and/or anaerobic environment that have lower levels of oxygen, so that microaerophiles and obligate anaerobes can also grow (1)
The pH of the skin is usually acidic, but the exact pH may vary depending on the specific location. The skin’s acidity results from lactic acid from the host cells and the microbes, the amino acids from sweat, the fatty acids from sebum, and acids produced during keratinization (1). Although the skin is acidic, it is only suitable for neutrophile growth and not acidophiles or alkaliphiles. (1)


===Influence by Adjacent Communities (if any)===
===Influence by Adjacent Communities (if any)===

Revision as of 02:53, 27 August 2008

DESCRIPTION OF THE NICHE

Location

Physical Conditions

What are the conditions in your niche? Temperature, pressure, pH, moisture, etc.

Skin temperature of the skin varies depending on the location on the body. Toes and fingers tend to have the lowest temperatures, while the axillae and the groin tend to have the highest (1). The temperatures are usually 25-35 degrees Celcius, which is ideal for mesophiles rather than thermophiles or psychrophiles (1). The temperature only varies slightly so it there is not a dramatic selection for microbes colonizing certain areas, but does affect the growth rate of the microbes present. (1)

The moisture content on the skin is generally low, which limits the survival and growth of microbes. However, the eccrine glands can produce sweat, which increases the moisture on the surface of the skin; especially in areas where evaporation does not occur easily, such as the toes and axillae (1). Microbes tend to have greater populations in those occluded areas since there is an accumulation of secretions. (1)

The skin generally has a high oxygen concentration, so it acts primarily as an aerobic environment for anaerobes to grow (1). However, the hair follicles inside the skin provide a microaerophillic and/or anaerobic environment that have lower levels of oxygen, so that microaerophiles and obligate anaerobes can also grow (1) The pH of the skin is usually acidic, but the exact pH may vary depending on the specific location. The skin’s acidity results from lactic acid from the host cells and the microbes, the amino acids from sweat, the fatty acids from sebum, and acids produced during keratinization (1). Although the skin is acidic, it is only suitable for neutrophile growth and not acidophiles or alkaliphiles. (1)

Influence by Adjacent Communities (if any)

Is your niche close to another niche or influenced by another community of organisms?

Conditions under which the environment changes

Do any of the physical conditions change? Are there chemicals, other organisms, nutrients, etc. that might change the community of your niche.


WHO LIVES THERE?

The Microbes Present

You may refer to organisms by genus or by genus and species, depending upon how detailed the your information might be. If there is already a microbewiki page describing that organism, make a link to it.

Microbial Interactions

Describe any negative (competition) or positive (symbiosis) behavior

Do the microbes change their environment?

Do they alter pH, attach to surfaces, secrete anything, etc. etc.

Do the microbes carry out any metabolism that affects their environment?

Do they ferment sugars to produce acid, break down large molecules, fix nitrogen, etc. etc.


Current Research

Enter summaries of the most recent research. You may find it more appropriate to include this as a subsection under several of your other sections rather than separately here at the end. You should include at least FOUR topics of research and summarize each in terms of the question being asked, the results so far, and the topics for future study. (more will be expected from larger groups than from smaller groups)


References

[Sample reference] Takai, K., Sugai, A., Itoh, T., and Horikoshi, K. "Palaeococcus ferrophilus gen. nov., sp. nov., a barophilic, hyperthermophilic archaeon from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent chimney". International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 2000. Volume 50. p. 489-500.

1. Wilson, Michael. Bacteriology of Humans: an Ecological Perspective. Blackwell Publishing, 2008.

2. Wilson Michael. Microbial inhabitants of Humans: Their Ecology and Role in Health and Disease. Cambridge University Press, 2005.

3. DeAngelis, Y. M., Gemmer, C. M., Kaczvinsky, J. R., Kenneally, D. C., Schwartz, J. R., and Dawson Jr., T. L. “Three Etiologic Facets of Dandruff and Seborrheic Dermatitis: Malassezia Fungi, Sebaceous Lipids, and Individual Sensitivity.” Journal of Investigative Dermatology Symposium Proceedings (2005) 10, 295–297.


Edited by Patrick A. McGhee, Susan Lin, ____________________________________, students of Rachel Larsen