Skip to content
CIFAR header logo
fr
menu_mobile_logo_alt
  • Our Impact
    • Why CIFAR?
    • Impact Clusters
    • News
    • CIFAR Strategy
    • Nurturing a Resilient Earth
    • AI Impact
    • Donor Impact
    • CIFAR 40
  • Events
  • Programs
    • Research Programs
    • Pan-Canadian AI Strategy
    • Next Generation Initiatives
    • CIFAR Arrell Future of Food Initiative
  • People
    • Fellows & Advisors
    • CIFAR Global Scholars
    • Canada CIFAR AI Chairs
    • AI Strategy Leadership
    • Leadership
    • Staff Directory
  • Support Us
  • About
    • Our Story
    • Awards
    • Partnerships
    • Publications & Reports
    • Careers
    • Equity, Diversity & Inclusion
    • Statement on Institutional Neutrality
    • Research Security
  • fr
News

Advancing lifelong health: How CIFAR’s partnership with Manulife drives breakthrough research

By: Alison Rutka
24 Mar, 2026
March 24, 2026
Close-up of a person holding a clear capsule with colorful microbes inside. The person wears a mask, conveying a scientific or medical tone.

Research supported by the partnership is uncovering how environments, microbiomes and biological systems shape health across the human lifespan.

Through the Manulife CIFAR Health & Well-being Grants, researchers across CIFAR programs are investigating fundamental questions about the biological pathways that shape lifelong health. Their work is generating new insights into how early-life environments, microbial communities and physiological systems interact to influence development, disease and resilience.

Bold research driving discovery 

By supporting high-risk, high-potential research topics, this partnership has enabled CIFAR Fellows to explore fundamental questions in human biology. The following outcomes of the most recent Manulife CIFAR Health & Well-being Grants highlight the impact of this support:

  • Mapping the Generational Impact of Environments: CIFAR researchers Katherine Amato (Humans & the Microbiome) and Thom McDade (Child & Brain Development) demonstrated that early-life environmental exposures account for 77 per cent of the functional pathways that make an adult’s digestive system unique. This work provided a rare look at how our earliest surroundings “get under the skin” to dictate health decades later.
  • Decoding Drivers of Child Malnutrition: CIFAR Fellows in the Humans & the Microbiome program, Eran Elinav and Philippe Sansonetti, identified specific microbiome drivers of gut barrier dysfunction, a key contributor to stunted growth among millions of children globally. Their team screened 14,000 small molecules to identify promising therapeutic candidates for
  • Exploring the Lung-Brain Connection: Brian Dias and Staci Bilbo, CIFAR Fellows in the Child & Brain Development program, investigated how the lungs communicate with the brain through extracellular vesicles (EVs). This research explored how factors like “Long COVID” and childhood exposure to air pollution may be linked to increased depression incidence later in life.
  • Hormonal Regulation via Gut Microbes: Led by Carolina Tropini, Naama Geva-Zatorsky and Martin Blaser in the Humans & the Microbiome program, researchers discovered that gut microbes can influence stress hormone levels across generations, even in the absence of disease. This resulted in the design of a new bacterial biosensor to detect these interactions in real time.
  • Insights from Evolutionary Health Patterns: By studying the cyclical microbiome changes in wild orangutans, researchers in the Humans & the Microbiome program uncovered how seasonal dietary variety contributes to health and longevity. This work pushed our understanding toward a more dynamic model of how humans might maintain health through environmental trade-offs.

A foundation for future innovation

These findings continue to lay the groundwork for microbiota-based interventions to restore hormonal balance and improve metabolic health, while establishing new fields of inquiry into human behaviour and learning. By mobilizing the world’s most brilliant people across disciplines, CIFAR researchers continue to address fundamental questions in science to help solve some of humanity’s biggest health challenges.

Through the Longevity Institute, a global platform for research, thought leadership, innovation, advocacy and community investment, Manulife is committed to advancing evidence-based insights that help people live healthier, longer lives. Supporting CIFAR’s Health & Well-being research reflects this commitment by deepening understanding of the biological and environmental drivers of lifelong health.

 

  • Follow Us

Related Articles

  • “the House that Pigs built:” CIFAR researchers unveil how pig-derived materials shape everyday life
    April 16, 2026
  • The new frontier of AI and neurology
    March 28, 2026
  • CIFAR awards over $1M to support sociotechnical challenges in AI safety
    March 28, 2026
  • Advancing lifelong health: How CIFAR’s partnership with Manulife drives breakthrough research
    March 24, 2026

Support Us

The Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) is a globally influential research organization proudly based in Canada. We mobilize the world’s most brilliant people across disciplines and at all career stages to advance transformative knowledge and solve humanity’s biggest problems, together. We are supported by the governments of Canada, Alberta and Québec, as well as Canadian and international foundations, individuals, corporations and partner organizations.

Donate Now
CIFAR header logo

MaRS Centre, West Tower
661 University Ave., Suite 505
Toronto, ON M5G 1M1 Canada

Contact Us
Media
Careers
Accessibility Policies
Supporters
Financial Reports
Subscribe

  • © Copyright 2026 CIFAR. All Rights Reserved.
  • Charitable Registration Number: 11921 9251 RR0001
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Sitemap

Subscribe

Stay up to date on news & ideas from CIFAR.

This website stores cookies on your computer. These cookies are used to collect information about how you interact with our website and allow us to remember you. We use this information in order to improve and customize your browsing experience and for analytics and metrics about our visitors both on this website and other media. To find out more about the cookies we use, see our Privacy Policy.
Accept Learn more