Abstract

This paper critically discusses the increasing trend in human microbiome research to draw on the concept of race. This refers to the attempt to investigate the microbial profile of certain social and ethnic groups as embodied racial traits. Here, race is treated as a necessary category that helps in identifying and solving health challenges, like obesity and type-2 diabetes, in ‘western’ or indigenous populations with particular microbial characteristics. We are skeptical of this new environmentalist trend to racialize human bodies due to two reasons: (i) These race studies repeat outdated historical narratives, which link especially nutrition and race in ways that are prone to stir stereotypical and exclusionary views on indigenous groups. (ii) The concept of biological race used here is taxonomically problematic and conceptually inconsistent. It leads to a view in which human races are constituted by other non-human species. In addition, this approach cannot group biological individuals into human races and decouples races from ancestry. To support this critique, we draw on case studies of microbiome research on indigenous groups in Latin America.

Highlights

  • The presence of race in biomedical research has been a longcontested issue

  • Racial difference is conceptualized as socio-cultural difference that is inscribed into human holobionts

  • We have critically assessed the recent trend in human microbiome research to classify certain social and ethnic groups as biological races with embodied traits

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Summary

Introduction

Ann Hum Genet 35(3):255 Nieves Delgado A, García-Deister V, López-Beltrán C (2017) What do I look like? Narratives of origin, heredity and identity inscribed on the appearance. Hisp Am Hist Rev 94(3):455486 Porras AM, Brito IL (2019) The internationalization of human microbiome research. Sonnenburg ED, Sonnenburg JL (2019) The ancestral and industrialized gut microbiota and implications for human health. Tito RY, Knights D, Metcalf J et al (2012) Insights from characterizing extinct human gut microbiomes. Walter J, Armet AM, Finlay BB, Shanahan F (2020) Establishing or exaggerating causality for the gut microbiome: lessons from human microbiota-associated rodents. Yatsunenko T, Rey FE, Manary MJ et al (2012) Human gut microbiome viewed across age and geography.

Conclusions and outlook
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