Dogs Improve Human Mental Health by Transferring Beneficial Microbes

Gaby

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And as Gurdjieff said, "practice love on animals first; they react better and more sensitively."

Dog ownership during adolescence alters the human microbiome in ways that measurably improve social behavior.



A new peer-reviewed study in iScience reports that adolescents who live with dogs experience significantly better mental and social health — and the mechanism appears to be microbial, not merely psychological.

Using longitudinal data from a population-based cohort of 345 adolescents, combined with microbiome sequencing and germ-free mouse transplantation experiments, researchers demonstrated that dog ownership during adolescence alters the human microbiome in ways that measurably improve social behavior.

Rather than relying on self-reported well-being or cross-sectional associations, investigators assessed dog ownership at age 13, psychiatric outcomes at age 14 using standardized clinical instruments, and then directly tested causality by transferring saliva-derived microbiota from adolescents into germ-free mice.

The result: microbes associated with dog-owning teens were sufficient, on their own, to induce more social, pro-social behavior in animals raised in completely controlled conditions.


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Across the cohort, adolescents who owned dogs showed consistently lower scores for mental and behavioral problems, particularly in domains related to social functioning. Compared with non-dog-owning peers, they exhibited significantly fewer social problems, less social withdrawal, fewer thought problems, lower delinquent behavior, and reduced aggression.

The strongest effect was observed in social problems
, and critically, these associations remained statistically significant after adjusting for sex, household income, number of siblings, and family size, indicating that the findings were not explained by socioeconomic advantage, family structure, or demographic differences.

Dog ownership during adolescence predicted better mental health one year later.

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When researchers analyzed the adolescents’ oral microbiomes, they did not find broad differences in overall diversity. Instead, the signal emerged at strain-level resolution. Adolescents who lived with dogs harbored higher abundances of specific bacterial variants, particularly distinct Streptococcus amplicon sequence variants (ASVs).

Importantly, these strains were inversely associated with behavioral problems, including delinquent behavior and thought disturbances.
To test whether these microbial differences merely tracked behavior or actually caused it, the researchers performed a decisive experiment. Saliva-derived microbiota from dog-owning and non-dog-owning adolescents were transplanted into germ-free mice, which were then evaluated using validated social behavior tests.

Mice colonized with microbiota from dog-owning adolescents showed significantly greater social approach behaviors, including increased engagement with trapped conspecifics — a well-established proxy for pro-social or empathy-like behavior in rodents.

When the investigators analyzed the mice’s gut microbiota, they found that the same Streptococcus strains associated with better mental health in adolescents were also associated with increased sociability in mice.

Dogs improve human mental health not just through love — but by transferring beneficial microbes that support social brain function.

By acting as vectors of microbial exchange, dogs may help restore environmental microbial inputs that humans historically coexisted with, supporting healthier neurobehavioral development through microbiome–brain pathways.

One thing is clear: if dogs influence human mental health through microbial exchange, then altering dogs with self-amplifying RNA injections may disrupt that pathway entirely. Merck’s NOBIVAC NXT platform is currently being administered by veterinarians across the country for canine flu, rabies, and FLV. It would be wise to refrain from giving your pet this experimental saRNA injection.
 
Been a two edge sword in my experience! I've had dog obsessed GFs and one wife, rather unpleasant.
What about horse people? I was at this accident a couple of months ago and helped extract the badly injured driver. Before we achieved that he was viciously attacked by the horsey set on social media. Nasty, nasty people, mostly women, he was actually the hero of the day, his split second reaction made the accident much less worse than it already was.
Q: (L) We have one little personal question we want to ask before we shut down shop for tonight: We have a situation with puppy dog, Argos, and we would like to know if we are dealing with the situation appropriately. And is there anything we should know about this situation that we don't?
A: You are dealing appropriately. This is not a time for persons who have issues of their own to take on responsibility for another creature that can act as a conduit of negative energies.
Q: (L) So, is the outcome that we have predicted where this has to go?
A: Most likely.
Seems to be the rule rather than the exception, I'll stick with my chickens.
 
Been a two edge sword in my experience! I've had dog obsessed GFs and one wife, rather unpleasant.
What about horse people? I was at this accident a couple of months ago and helped extract the badly injured driver. Before we achieved that he was viciously attacked by the horsey set on social media. Nasty, nasty people, mostly women, he was actually the hero of the day, his split second reaction made the accident much less worse than it already was.

Seems to be the rule rather than the exception, I'll stick with my chickens.
I suppose it depends on you as a person and your situation. When I first got my dog it gave me a reason to go out so much in nature, and now she's the best protector of the house (she takes that job a little too seriously 😂) but I feel safe knowing she would alert us immediately if there was ever a break in!
 
It's so interesting to begin to understand how much our microbiome can effect our emotions, choices, habits - everything. I was watching a YouTube video of one nutritionist and she mentioned that our microbiome plays a role in what movies we watch, for instance. I can't recall exactly what was said, but the gist of it was that if our microbiome is craving some cortisol, or is habituated to cortisol, it'll influence our choice to watch a thriller or war movie - if it's craving or habituated to oxytocin, a romance comedy. That sort of thing. As G said, we're three-brained bipedal beings, and one of those brains is the gut!
 
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