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Published August 24, 2022

Martin J. Blaser is the director of the Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine at Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences, and Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello is the Henry Rutgers Professor of Microbiome and Health at the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences. (Photo by Roy Groething)

Microbiologists Martin J. Blaser and Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello, esteemed for investigating the widespread depletion in the diversity of the human microbiome, are the subject of a documentary.

Rutgers microbiologists Martin J. Blaser and Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello, internationally esteemed for their pioneering work in investigating the widespread depletion in the diversity of the human microbiome, are the subject of The Invisible Extinction. The documentary chronicles the (married) couple’s research into the link between the microbiome—comprising the trillions of competing and cooperating bacteria, or microbes, teeming in and on our bodies—and diseases like diabetes, cancer, asthma, and autism. The feature-length film, which premiered at the Copenhagen International Documentary Film Festival in March, follows their efforts in advocating for the protection of the microbiome and measures that can be taken to restore lost microbiome diversity—a common malady among populations living in industrialized nations. Contributing to compromised microbiomes are factors such as the overuse of antibiotics, elective C-sections, and the consumption of processed foods. The documentary also reveals the plans of Blaser and Dominguez-Bello to create the Micro-biota Vault—an international repository, modeled after the Svalbard Global Seed Vault in Norway—that would contain strains of all known bacteria, which could be replicated and introduced into people suffering from a depleted microbiome and related diseases.

 

Story originally appeared in Rutgers Magazine.

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