Marine bioactive compounds as antibiofilm agent: a metabolomic approach

被引:0
|
作者
Dibyajit Lahiri
Moupriya Nag
Ankita Dey
Tanmay Sarkar
Siddhartha Pati
Nilesh P. Nirmal
Rina Rani Ray
Vijay Jagdish Upadhye
Soumya Pandit
M. Moovendhan
M. Kavisri
机构
[1] University of Engineering & Management,Department of Biotechnology
[2] Maulana Abul Kalam Azad University of Technology,Department of Biotechnology
[3] Malda Polytechnic,Department of Food Processing Technology
[4] West Bengal State Council of Technical Education,Institute of Nutrition
[5] Government of West Bengal,Center of Research for Development (CR4D)
[6] Nat Nov Bioscience Private Limited,Department of Life Sciences, School of Basic Sciences and Research
[7] Mahidol University,Department of Civil Engineering, School of Building and Environment
[8] Parul Institute of Applied Sciences (PIAS),undefined
[9] Parul University,undefined
[10] Sharda University,undefined
[11] Centre for Ocean Research (DST-FIST Sponsored Centre) MoES-Earth Science & Technology Cell,undefined
[12] Col. Dr. Jeppiaar Research Park,undefined
[13] Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology,undefined
[14] Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology,undefined
来源
Archives of Microbiology | 2023年 / 205卷
关键词
Antibiofilm; Marine organisms; Metabolomics; Natural compound;
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摘要
The ocean is a treasure trove of both living and nonliving creatures, harboring incredibly diverse group of organisms. A plethora of marine sourced bioactive compounds are discovered over the past few decades, many of which are found to show antibiofilm activity. These are of immense clinical significance since the formation of microbial biofilm is associated with the development of high antibiotic resistance. Biofilms are also responsible to bring about problems associated with industries. In fact, the toilets and wash-basins also show degradation due to development of biofilm on their surfaces. Antimicrobial resistance exhibited by the biofilm can be a potent threat not only for the health care unit along with industries and daily utilities. Various recent studies have shown that the marine members of various kingdom are capable of producing antibiofilm compounds. Many such compounds are with unique structural features and metabolomics approaches are essential to study such large sets of metabolites. Associating holobiome metabolomics with analysis of their chemical attribute may bring new insights on their antibiofilm effect and their applicability as a substitute for conventional antibiotics. The application of computer-aided drug design/discovery (CADD) techniques including neural network approaches and structured-based virtual screening, ligand-based virtual screening in combination with experimental validation techniques may help in the identification of these molecules and evaluation of their drug like properties.
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