Abstract
Graphical AbstractCIFAR's Humans & the Microbiome program is a multidisciplinary group of biological, clinical, and social scientists who explore the links between microbiome biology and sociocultural, historical, evolutionary, and environmental aspects of human existence that may impact the microbiome or be impacted by it. In this focus issue, members of the program focus on topics ranging from decoding the link between nutrition, the microbiome and human developmental, metabolic, and immune health and aging, to understanding past changes in the environment and microbiome. The image depicts a population of bacteria (green) in association with the epithelia tissues (magenta and blue), perhaps the most common type of symbiosis in humans and other animals. Image contribution: Tara Essock-Burns. DOI: 10.1002/bies.201900130.