Abstract

Our understanding of the link between the human microbiome and disease, including obesity, inflammatory bowel disease, arthritis and autism, is rapidly expanding. Improvements in the throughput and accuracy of DNA sequencing of the genomes of microbial communities that are associated with human samples, complemented by analysis of transcriptomes, proteomes, metabolomes and immunomes and by mechanistic experiments in model systems, have vastly improved our ability to understand the structure and function of the microbiome in both diseased and healthy states. However, many challenges remain. In this review, we focus on studies in humans to describe these challenges and propose strategies that leverage existing knowledge to move rapidly from correlation to causation and ultimately to translation into therapies.

Keywords

MicrobiomeComputational biologyHuman microbiomeDiseaseHuman diseaseBiologyMetagenomicsProteomeGenomeBioinformaticsMedicineGeneticsGene

MeSH Terms

BiomarkersDiseaseHumansLife StyleMicrobiotaPrecision MedicineTranslational ResearchBiomedical

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
review
Volume
24
Issue
4
Pages
392-400
Citations
2433
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2433
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33
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Cite This

Jack A. Gilbert, Martin J. Blaser, J. Gregory Caporaso et al. (2018). Current understanding of the human microbiome. Nature Medicine , 24 (4) , 392-400. https://doi.org/10.1038/nm.4517

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/nm.4517
PMID
29634682
PMCID
PMC7043356

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%