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If you've got a cold, 
 mucus is hard to miss.
 
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But what is it, and what does it do
 besides making your miserable?
 
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Your body produces more than a liter
 of mucus every day,
 
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and all the wet surfaces of your body
 that are not covered by skin,
 
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like your eyes, 
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nose, 
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mouth, 
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lungs, 
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and stomach get a liberal coating. 
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That's why they're known 
 as mucus membranes.
 
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Mucus plays lots of roles
 in your body.
 
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It keeps delicate tissues 
 from drying out and cracking,
 
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which would expose them to infection. 
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It lubricates your eyes so you can blink. 
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It protects your stomach lining
 from acid.
 
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It neutralizes threats by removing
 or trapping substances
 
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that could make you sick. 
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And finally, it houses and keeps your
 body's trillions of bacterial inhabitants,
 
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your microbiota, under control. 
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Mucus contains lots 
 of different compounds,
 
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including proteins, fats, and salts. 
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But a key component of mucus versatility
 is a set of proteins called mucins.
 
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Mucins are the primary 
 large molecules in mucus
 
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and are essential 
 for giving mucus its slippery feel.
 
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They belong to a class of proteins
 called glycoproteins
 
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which are built out of both amino acids
 and sugars.
 
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In mucin, long chains of sugar
 are attached to specific amino acids
 
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in the protein backbone. 
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The hydrophilic sugar chains help mucin
 dissolve in your body's watery fluids.
 
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Mucus, which is up to 90% water, 
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stays hydrated thanks 
 to these sugar chains.
 
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Some of these mucins can interact
 with other mucin molecules
 
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to create a complex network
 that establishes a barrier
 
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against pathogens and other invaders. 
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That's why mucus is the body's first line
 of defense against foreign objects,
 
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like bacteria and dust. 
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It's continuously produced to clear them
 from the resperatory tract,
 
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like a slimy conveyor belt. 
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This keeps bacteria from getting
 a solid purchase on delicate lung tissue,
 
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or making it to the blood stream,
 where they could cause a major infection.
 
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Many of those harmful bacteria
 also cause diseases
 
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when they cluster into slimy growths
 called biofilms.
 
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But mucus contains mucins, 
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antimicrobial peptides, 
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antibodies, 
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and even bacteria-hungry viruses
 called bacteriophages
 
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that all work together to prevent
 biofilms from forming.
 
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If microbes do become harmful 
 and you get sick,
 
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the body ramps up mucus production
 to try to quickly flush out the offenders,
 
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and the immune system floods your mucus
 with extra white blood cells.
 
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In fact, the greenish mucus often
 associated with infections
 
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gets its color from an enzyme
 produced by those white blood cells.
 
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This multi-pronged approach 
 to bacterial management
 
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is one of the main reasons 
 why we're not sick all the time.
 
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Even though mucus protects against
 the infectious bacteria,
 
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the vast majority of your body's bacterial
 tenants are not harmful,
 
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and many are actually beneficial. 
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That's particularly true 
 when they live in mucus,
 
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where they can perform 
 important functions,
 
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like synthesizing vitamins, 
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suppressing harmful inflamation, 
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and controlling the growth 
 of more harmful species.
 
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So even though you probably associate
 mucus with being ill,
 
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it's really helping you stay healthy. 
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Sure, it might seem gross, 
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but can you think of any other substance
 that can lubricate,
 
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keep your body clean, 
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fight infection, 
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and domesticate a teaming 
 bacterial population?
 
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Nope, just mucus.