Microbiomes are communities of microorganisms—bacteria, archaea, viruses, fungi, prions, protozoa and algae—that live on, in and around people, plants, animals, soil, oceans and the atmosphere. These microbial communities play important roles in everything from human growth and development to food production and climate change.
A better understanding of microbiome development, composition and function—in people and beyond—will continue to inform strategies that harness the power of microbes to foster human and planetary health​.
A better understanding of microbiome development, composition and function—in people and beyond—will continue to inform strategies that harness the power of microbes to foster human and planetary health​.
The Human Microbiome
Advocating For Microbiome Research
Advocacy Priorities
ASM strongly supports investments in microbiome research, as well as in the infrastructure—technology, data standardization, training and workforce—necessary to realize the full potential of those research investments and their application.
ASM advocates for the following:
ASM advocates for the following:
- Support for better coordination of and more funding for multidisciplinary microbiome research across the federal government.
- Workforce development and training in the synthesis of microbiome data and information for practical application.
- Facilitation of data standardization and sharing, including through continued funding of the National Microbiome Data Collaborative.
- Continued support for a One Health approach to human health at all levels that reflects the intersections between people, animals, plants and the built environment.
Statements
- ASM Supports Microbiome Research Funding at NSF and Increased Coordination of Microbiome Research.
- ASM Proposes Study on Food Animal Microbiome Within USDA.
- ASM Calls for Investments in Microbiome Research at NIH.
- National Microbiome Data Collaborative Essential for Scientific Discovery.
- Harnessing the Microbiome to Understand and Reduce Antimicrobial Resistance.
Microbiomes are Everywhere
Hear from Experts
Videos
Podcasts
Drs. Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello and Martin Blaser explain the importance of preserving microbial diversity in the human microbiome and discuss their recent involvement in The Invisible Extinction, a documentary about the race to prevent loss of ancestral microbes and save the bacteria that contribute to human health and well-being.
Rachel Dutton discusses her work studying cheese microbiomes, one of the few microbial ecosystem types where almost all of the microorganisms are culturable.
Graciela Lorca studies genetic systems to find positive and negative microbial interactions that lead to disease and describes how specific bacterial strains may help prevent development of diabetes.
Rachel Dutton discusses her work studying cheese microbiomes, one of the few microbial ecosystem types where almost all of the microorganisms are culturable.
Graciela Lorca studies genetic systems to find positive and negative microbial interactions that lead to disease and describes how specific bacterial strains may help prevent development of diabetes.
Educational Materials
Which Microbe Are You?
This K-12 activity, explores the human microbiome using a 'microbial personality' quiz that matches students with a particular microbe.
Microbiome One-Pager
This factsheet designed for policymakers includes recommendations for investments in microbiome research.
FAQ: Human Microbiome
This Academy FAQ report details the activities of the microbial species comprising the human microbiome, and recommends research to understand the connections between microbiome composition, host genetics and health.