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- Open access
- ISSN: 2632-2897 (Online)
Editorial Board
Gut Microbiome is an open access journal, co-published by Cambridge University Press and The Nutrition Society, with the aim of supporting the development of an integrated, interdisciplinary understanding of the gut microbiome. The journal focus on the contributing factors that influence the gut microbiota and in turn how the gut microbiome impacts the health, development and disease status of the whole human body. The scope includes research dedicated to the role that different diets, pharmaceuticals and nutraceutricals, prebiotics and probiotics have in shaping an individual’s microbiome composition. Studies on animals will be welcomed when relevant to understanding the human microbiome and its interactions. Research on non-gut microbiomes will also be in scope if they have interactions with the gut microbiome; for example the interplay of the mother’s vaginal and skin microbiome in seeding the child’s gut microbiome. Notably, the journal will include the newly emerging field of research focusing on how the gut microbiome influences the immune and nervous systems.
Latest GMB Articles
On the Blog
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From Curiosity to Leadership in Nutrition: Andrea Azcarate-Peril
- 10 February 2026,
- To mark International Day of Women and Girls in Science, we are celebrating the stories of women whose curiosity, resilience and strength have shaped their...
Nutrition Society Paper of the Month
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When Chocolate Calls Louder: What PMS Really Does to Women’s Appetite
- 25 February 2026,
- The paper “The role of premenstrual syndrome in hedonic hunger and food craving during the menstrual cycle“, published in Journal of Nutritional Science, has...
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Does Adaptive Thermogenesis occur in adolescents with obesity?
- 27 January 2026,
- The Paper of the Month for January is “Adaptive thermogenesis in response to weight loss and weight regain: first evidence in adolescents with severe obesity”...
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Why a whole-population approach to the gut microbiome in the first 1000 days of life can help us tackle nutrition-related non-communicable diseases
- 23 December 2025,
- The paper “Overcoming barriers to gut microbiome development through nutritional factors in the first 1,000 days of life: strategies and implications...
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