Microbiome
"Microbiome" in a Sentence (9 examples)
Some doctors recommend taking probiotics in order to restore the gut microbiome.
And there’s growing evidence that the 100 trillion or so microbes we carry on us and inside us — what scientists call our microbiome — are doing all sorts of things we never expected, from training our immune systems to regulating our moods.
The pesticide degraded the health of the microbiome within the soil.
The human microbiota consists of the 10-100 trillion symbiotic microbial cells harbored by each person, primarily bacteria in the gut; the human microbiome consists of the genes these cells harbor.
Your body’s microbiome is all the genes your microbiota contains, however colloquially the two terms are often used interchangeably.
Mostly, the microbiome is beneficial. It helps with digestion and enables people to extract a lot more calories from their food than would otherwise be possible. Research over the past few years, however, has implicated it in diseases from atherosclerosis to asthma to autism.
The microbiome creates the immediate environment for our genes as they play out their part in disease mechanisms.
Yes, there are microbes everywhere and most are just fine for us, perhaps even beneficial to our microbiomes and immune systems. We don’t care about those.
For your community of microbes— your 'microbiome' — your body is a planet.
More for "microbiome"
Next best steps
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.