From global to local: rethinking the design of probiotic intervention strategies
Pascale Vonaesch, Julian R. Garneau, Maria Gloria Domínguez-Bello
Abstract
The human microbiome plays a crucial role in maintaining homeostasis and influencing disease development, yet its composition varies across geography, age, and lifestyle. These differences challenge the efficacy of universal probiotic treatments and call for more personalized or regionally adapted approaches. In this review we examine the limitations of universal probiotics, emphasizing the importance of considering host-microbe co-adaptation, local dietary practices, and ecological context. We argue that probiotic design must account for microbial diversity, strain-level adaptation, and functional redundancy, and we explore how these factors affect colonization success and therapeutic potential. Finally, we discuss ways to re-center microbiome knowledge within diverse ecological, cultural, and epistemic traditions for a global, inclusive approach allowing for microbiome-targeted therapies that are both effective and accessible.