Understanding the role of microbiota in maintaining health has been allowing for better disease prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. For example, healthiest gut microbiotas are resistant to invasion; conversely, gut microbiota vulnerability (that is the inverse of robustness) makes pathogenic invasion simpler. Thus, having a healthy, robust gut microbiota could help prevent pathogens from thriving. In other words, having a healthy, robust gut microbiota is desirable when antibiotic treatments are needed. Specific microbiota compositions are associated with better health conditions. Unravelling individual profiles, microbiota analysis helps promote a good health status and prevent intestinal or systemic diseases (including cancer) acting on microbiota composition.
Microbiota analysis can be useful to protect the health and well-being of and individual throughout life, from infancy to old age, and to develop individualized food plans and other lifestyle or, if needed, drugbased approaches aimed at correcting imbalances or improving microbiota composition. First studies on microbes – including those living in the gut – predominantly focused on individual species cultured in the laboratory. The first sequenced microbial genome (that of Haemophilus influenzae) was published in 1995. However, the vast majority of microbes – including bacteria living in the gut – cannot be cultured in the laboratory, and therefore cannot be studied with classical microbiological methods.