The NIH Human Microbiome Project

The NIH HMP Working Group(National Institutes of Health), Jane L. Peterson(National Institutes of Health), Susan Garges(National Institutes of Health), Maria Y. Giovanni(National Institutes of Health), Pamela McInnes(National Institutes of Health), Lu Wang(National Institutes of Health), Jeffery A. Schloss(National Institutes of Health), Vivien Bonazzi(National Institutes of Health), Jean E. McEwen(National Institutes of Health), Kris A. Wetterstrand(National Institutes of Health), Carolyn Deal(National Institutes of Health), Carl C. Baker(National Institutes of Health), Valentina Di Francesco(National Institutes of Health), T. Kevin Howcroft(National Institutes of Health), Robert W. Karp(National Institutes of Health), R. Dwayne Lunsford(National Institutes of Health), Christopher R. Wellington(National Institutes of Health), Tsegahiwot Belachew(National Institutes of Health), Michael Wright(National Institutes of Health), Christina Giblin(National Institutes of Health), Hagit David(National Institutes of Health), Melody Mills(National Institutes of Health), Rachelle Salomon(National Institutes of Health), Christopher Mullins(National Institutes of Health), Beena Akolkar(National Institutes of Health), Lisa Begg(National Institutes of Health), Cindy D. Davis(National Institutes of Health), Lindsey Grandison(National Institutes of Health), Michael C. Humble(National Institutes of Health), Jag Khalsa(National Institutes of Health), A. Roger Little(National Institutes of Health), Hannah Peavy(National Institutes of Health), Carol H. Pontzer(National Institutes of Health), Matthew E. Portnoy(National Institutes of Health), Michael H. Sayre(National Institutes of Health), Pamela Starke‐Reed(National Institutes of Health), Samir Zakhari(National Institutes of Health), Jennifer Read(National Institutes of Health), Bracie Watson(National Institutes of Health), Mark S. Guyer
Genome Research
October 9, 2009
Cited by 2,067Open Access
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Abstract

The Human Microbiome Project (HMP), funded as an initiative of the NIH Roadmap for Biomedical Research (http://nihroadmap.nih.gov), is a multi-component community resource. The goals of the HMP are: (1) to take advantage of new, high-throughput technologies to characterize the human microbiome more fully by studying samples from multiple body sites from each of at least 250 "normal" volunteers; (2) to determine whether there are associations between changes in the microbiome and health/disease by studying several different medical conditions; and (3) to provide both a standardized data resource and new technological approaches to enable such studies to be undertaken broadly in the scientific community. The ethical, legal, and social implications of such research are being systematically studied as well. The ultimate objective of the HMP is to demonstrate that there are opportunities to improve human health through monitoring or manipulation of the human microbiome. The history and implementation of this new program are described here.


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