The Integrative Human Microbiome Project

Lita M. Proctor(National Institutes of Health), Heather H. Creasy(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Jennifer M. Fettweis(Virginia Commonwealth University), Jason Lloyd‐Price(Broad Institute), Anup Mahurkar(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Wenyu Zhou(Stanford University), Gregory A. Buck(Virginia Commonwealth University), M Snyder(Stanford Medicine), Jerome F. Strauss(Virginia Commonwealth University), George M. Weinstock(Jackson Laboratory), Owen White(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Curtis Huttenhower(Broad Institute)
Nature
May 29, 2019
Cited by 1,364Open Access
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Abstract

The NIH Human Microbiome Project (HMP) has been carried out over ten years and two phases to provide resources, methods, and discoveries that link interactions between humans and their microbiomes to health-related outcomes. The recently completed second phase, the Integrative Human Microbiome Project, comprised studies of dynamic changes in the microbiome and host under three conditions: pregnancy and preterm birth; inflammatory bowel diseases; and stressors that affect individuals with prediabetes. The associated research begins to elucidate mechanisms of host-microbiome interactions under these conditions, provides unique data resources (at the HMP Data Coordination Center), and represents a paradigm for future multi-omic studies of the human microbiome.


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