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The Bacterium Bacillus subtilis taken with a Tecnai T-12 TEM. Taken by Allon Weiner, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel. 2006.
Join us to know the properties antiage and health benefits in humans and pets that this probiotic has to offer.
Bacillus subtilis is the name of this bacteria discovered in 1835 by the German scientist Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg, who originally called it Vibriosubtilis Later, in 1872, the German bacteriologist Ferdinand Cohn names the bacterium by the name by which it is recognized today.
Let's see its properties and benefits for your organism.
Its location is multiple: it is in the soil, the water, and peat in different regions of the planet. In addition, it can be found in the gastrointestinal tract of ruminants and humans.
As a probiotic it settles in the intestine helping the first immunological barrier producing 3 natural antibiotics:
These help to eliminate fungi and pathogenic bacteria. In addition, its horizontal genomic transfer has been verified as a symbiosis with enterocytes -thus enhancing the axis, microorganism, intestine, CNS-.
This is why it has proven to be the the number one probiotic due to its viability, adaptation to the environment and its genomic potential.
But the most important thing is to explain its mechanism as a cell antiaging.
This mechanism is based on the biochemical pathway of the IGF 1 produced by the bacillus - that is, the polypeptide hormone induced its production in humans and animals by growth hormone, with great similitude to insulin, only it's produced by the liver instead of the pancreas. The Bacillus subtilis can produce it biochemically -it is 50% similar to insulin but with more anabolic characteristics-.
This molecule acts on the epigenome -that is, the proteins related to DNA- (mainly histones) by stimulating the 4 Yamanaka Genes. This results in a biochemical cascade of regeneration and cell rejuvenation.
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