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To study gut bacteria, scientists focus much of their attention on excrement, which is teeming with bacteria that used to live in the gastrointestinal tract. For the sake of scientific accuracy, this experimental poop has needed a name. And now it has one thanks to UNC School of Medicine scientist Aadra Bhatt, PhD, and colleagues.


CHAPEL HILL, NC – You’ve heard of “in vitro” (the study of things in test tubes) and “in vivo” (the study of things in a living system). Now meet “in fimo,” a new scientific term coined by researchers at the UNC School of Medicine and Notre Dame University to mean “excrement examined experimentally.” Their proposal was published in the journal Gastroenterology.

Why, you might ask, do we need a scientifically accurate term based in Latin for the study of poop? The answer is quite simple: because so many scientific words are based in Latin and there hasn’t been one for the experimental study of excrement, even though the scientific study of human waste is now at the forefront of biomedical research. Our stools can tell us a lot about what’s going on inside our gastrointestinal systems because in excrement we find a diverse sampling of the bacteria populating our guts. And all of these microbes – scientifically referred to as the microbiota – can be quite important to human health.

For instance, when our bacterial composition is out of balance, the results can range from the mildly unpleasant to the wildly serious. There’s strong evidence that gut bacteria play important roles in weight gain, eating disorders, cancers, gut diseases, and even autism. Studying these bacteria has become extremely important. Yet, when discussing this work in scientific papers, researchers have not been as accurate in their terminology as scientists are known to be.

When Aadra Bhatt, PhD, assistant professor of medicine at UNC-Chapel Hill, realized the need for a proper term, she set out to find one. But as can happen while digging into Latin, the pursuit of a proper name for the experimental study of poop became soiled with impurities. Bhatt enlisted the help of Luca Grillo, PhD, a classics professor at Notre Dame, formerly of UNC-Chapel Hill, to help investigate the Latin roots of the word “manure.” Turns out, those pesky Romans had no less than four Latin terms for “manure” – laetamen, merda, stercus, and fimus.

Bhatt and Grillo traced laetamen to the Latin root laetus, which means “fertile, rich, happy.”

“For all its cheerful associations with joy,” Grillo said. “We had to resist the temptation to use ‘in Laetamine’ as our term of choice because it seems to have been more related to farm animal dung.”

Merda also didn’t smell right. It’s remained unchanged in Romance languages as a reference to poop – merde in French, mierda in Spanish, and merda in Italian – possibly derived from a root word smerd/smord, from which came the Old English derivatives “stinkan” and the current English words of “stink” and “stench.”

With two terms down the drain, Bhatt researched stercus and fimus. Both are older than laetamen and were never used to refer to stench. Bhatt and Grillo found that the word stercus was used broadly in ancient times, including as a term of abuse. It also seems to share the root word from which “scatology” originated. And scatology refers to “obscene literature.”

Originally, Romans used the term fimus less than stercus, and fimus seemed to refer strictly to the use of manure in agriculture. But, the key Roman writers Virgil, Livy, and Tacitus used fimus and never stercus.

Fimus, then, with its technical accuracy and literary ring made us opt for “in fimo” as our scientific term of choice for the experimental examination of excrement,” Bhatt said.

Sticks in the mud of modernity might ask, “why not just use ‘fecal’ or ‘in feco?’”

Because both are wrong. Grillo said, “Faex never meant “excrement” in Latin, and its derivative, ‘feces,’ did not enter English usage until the 17th century, when it first referred to the dregs at the bottom of a wine cask or other storage vessels.”

And so, Bhatt and colleagues – including UNC co-author Matthew Redinbo, PhD – have been using “fimus” and “in fimo” at international academic conferences to rave reviews. They are quite aware of the whimsical nature of this work. Therefore, just as some scientists have fun with their naming of model organisms – such as “Dumpy” for a mutant model of the classic worm C. elegans – Bhatt and colleagues have devised a playful term for the active enzymes they extract from their in fimo samples: poopernatant.

Bhatt is an assistant professor in the division of gastroenterology and hepatology at the UNC School of Medicine. She uses cutting-edge research tools to investigate reciprocal interactions between intestinal microbiota, pharmaceutical compounds, and the intestines. Grillo is an associate professor of classics at Notre Dame. Redinbo is William R. Kenan Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, Biochemistry, Microbiology, and Genomics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Media contact: Mark Derewicz, 984-974-1915, mark.derewicz@unchealth.unc.edu