Exploring host–microbiota interactions in animal models and humans

  1. Wendy S. Garrett1,2,3,4,5
  1. 1Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA;
  2. 2Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA;
  3. 3Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA;
  4. 4The Broad Institute of Harvard and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Massachusetts 02141, USA

    Abstract

    The animal and bacterial kingdoms have coevolved and coadapted in response to environmental selective pressures over hundreds of millions of years. The meta'omics revolution in both sequencing and its analytic pipelines is fostering an explosion of interest in how the gut microbiome impacts physiology and propensity to disease. Gut microbiome studies are inherently interdisciplinary, drawing on approaches and technical skill sets from the biomedical sciences, ecology, and computational biology. Central to unraveling the complex biology of environment, genetics, and microbiome interaction in human health and disease is a deeper understanding of the symbiosis between animals and bacteria. Experimental model systems, including mice, fish, insects, and the Hawaiian bobtail squid, continue to provide critical insight into how host–microbiota homeostasis is constructed and maintained. Here we consider how model systems are influencing current understanding of host–microbiota interactions and explore recent human microbiome studies.

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