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Recent Antimicrobial Responses of Halophilic Microbes in Clinical Pathogens

Microbial pathogens that cause severe infections and are resistant to drugs are simultaneously becoming more active. This urgently calls for novel effective antibiotics. Organisms from extreme environments are known to synthesize novel bioprospecting molecules for biomedical applications due to thei...

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Autores principales: Santhaseelan, Henciya, Dinakaran, Vengateshwaran Thasu, Dahms, Hans-Uwe, Ahamed, Johnthini Munir, Murugaiah, Santhosh Gokul, Krishnan, Muthukumar, Hwang, Jiang-Shiou, Rathinam, Arthur James
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8874722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35208871
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10020417
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author Santhaseelan, Henciya
Dinakaran, Vengateshwaran Thasu
Dahms, Hans-Uwe
Ahamed, Johnthini Munir
Murugaiah, Santhosh Gokul
Krishnan, Muthukumar
Hwang, Jiang-Shiou
Rathinam, Arthur James
author_facet Santhaseelan, Henciya
Dinakaran, Vengateshwaran Thasu
Dahms, Hans-Uwe
Ahamed, Johnthini Munir
Murugaiah, Santhosh Gokul
Krishnan, Muthukumar
Hwang, Jiang-Shiou
Rathinam, Arthur James
author_sort Santhaseelan, Henciya
collection PubMed
description Microbial pathogens that cause severe infections and are resistant to drugs are simultaneously becoming more active. This urgently calls for novel effective antibiotics. Organisms from extreme environments are known to synthesize novel bioprospecting molecules for biomedical applications due to their peculiar characteristics of growth and physiological conditions. Antimicrobial developments from hypersaline environments, such as lagoons, estuaries, and salterns, accommodate several halophilic microbes. Salinity is a distinctive environmental factor that continuously promotes the metabolic adaptation and flexibility of halophilic microbes for their survival at minimum nutritional requirements. A genetic adaptation to extreme solar radiation, ionic strength, and desiccation makes them promising candidates for drug discovery. More microbiota identified via sequencing and ‘omics’ approaches signify the hypersaline environments where compounds are produced. Microbial genera such as Bacillus, Actinobacteria, Halorubrum and Aspergillus are producing a substantial number of antimicrobial compounds. Several strategies were applied for producing novel antimicrobials from halophiles including a consortia approach. Promising results indicate that halophilic microbes can be utilised as prolific sources of bioactive metabolites with pharmaceutical potentialto expand natural product research towards diverse phylogenetic microbial groups which inhabit salterns. The present study reviews interesting antimicrobial compounds retrieved from microbial sources of various saltern environments, with a discussion of their potency in providing novel drugs against clinically drug-resistant microbes.
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spelling pubmed-88747222022-02-26 Recent Antimicrobial Responses of Halophilic Microbes in Clinical Pathogens Santhaseelan, Henciya Dinakaran, Vengateshwaran Thasu Dahms, Hans-Uwe Ahamed, Johnthini Munir Murugaiah, Santhosh Gokul Krishnan, Muthukumar Hwang, Jiang-Shiou Rathinam, Arthur James Microorganisms Review Microbial pathogens that cause severe infections and are resistant to drugs are simultaneously becoming more active. This urgently calls for novel effective antibiotics. Organisms from extreme environments are known to synthesize novel bioprospecting molecules for biomedical applications due to their peculiar characteristics of growth and physiological conditions. Antimicrobial developments from hypersaline environments, such as lagoons, estuaries, and salterns, accommodate several halophilic microbes. Salinity is a distinctive environmental factor that continuously promotes the metabolic adaptation and flexibility of halophilic microbes for their survival at minimum nutritional requirements. A genetic adaptation to extreme solar radiation, ionic strength, and desiccation makes them promising candidates for drug discovery. More microbiota identified via sequencing and ‘omics’ approaches signify the hypersaline environments where compounds are produced. Microbial genera such as Bacillus, Actinobacteria, Halorubrum and Aspergillus are producing a substantial number of antimicrobial compounds. Several strategies were applied for producing novel antimicrobials from halophiles including a consortia approach. Promising results indicate that halophilic microbes can be utilised as prolific sources of bioactive metabolites with pharmaceutical potentialto expand natural product research towards diverse phylogenetic microbial groups which inhabit salterns. The present study reviews interesting antimicrobial compounds retrieved from microbial sources of various saltern environments, with a discussion of their potency in providing novel drugs against clinically drug-resistant microbes. MDPI 2022-02-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8874722/ /pubmed/35208871 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10020417 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Santhaseelan, Henciya
Dinakaran, Vengateshwaran Thasu
Dahms, Hans-Uwe
Ahamed, Johnthini Munir
Murugaiah, Santhosh Gokul
Krishnan, Muthukumar
Hwang, Jiang-Shiou
Rathinam, Arthur James
Recent Antimicrobial Responses of Halophilic Microbes in Clinical Pathogens
title Recent Antimicrobial Responses of Halophilic Microbes in Clinical Pathogens
title_full Recent Antimicrobial Responses of Halophilic Microbes in Clinical Pathogens
title_fullStr Recent Antimicrobial Responses of Halophilic Microbes in Clinical Pathogens
title_full_unstemmed Recent Antimicrobial Responses of Halophilic Microbes in Clinical Pathogens
title_short Recent Antimicrobial Responses of Halophilic Microbes in Clinical Pathogens
title_sort recent antimicrobial responses of halophilic microbes in clinical pathogens
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8874722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35208871
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10020417
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