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      Controlling foodborne pathogens with natural antimicrobials by biological control and antivirulence strategies

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          Abstract

          Foodborne diseases represent a global health threat besides the great economic losses encountered by the food industry. These hazards necessitate the implementation of food preservation methods to control foodborne pathogens, the causal agents of human illnesses. Until now, most control methods rely on inhibiting the microbial growth or eliminating the pathogens by applying lethal treatments. Natural antimicrobials, which inhibit microbial growth, include traditional chemicals, naturally occurring antimicrobials, or biological preservation (e.g. beneficial microbes, bacteriocins, or bacteriophages). Although having great antimicrobial effectiveness, challenges due to the adaptation of foodborne pathogens to such control methods are becoming apparent. Such adaptation enables the survival of the pathogens in foods or food-contact environments. This imperative concern inspires contemporary research and food industry sector to develop technologies which do not target microbial growth but disarming microbial virulence factors. These technologies, referred to as "antivirulence", render the microbe non-capable of causing the disease with very limited or no opportunities for the pathogenic microorganisms to develop resistance. For the sake of safer and fresh-like foods, with no effect on the sensory properties of foods, a combination of two or more natural antimicrobials or with other stressors, is now widespread, to preserve foods. This review introduces and critically describes the traditional versus the emerging uses of natural antimicrobials for controlling foodborne pathogens in foods.

          Development of biological control strategies using natural antimicrobials proved to be effective in inhibiting microbial growth in foods and allowing improved food safety. In the meanwhile, discovery of new antivirulence agents could be a transformative strategy in food preservation in the far future.

          Abstract

          Food science; Food safety; Microbiology; Foodborne pathogens; Food preservation; Antimicrobial technologies; Antivirulence strategy; Natural antimicrobials.

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          Most cited references84

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          Quorum-Sensing Systems as Targets for Antivirulence Therapy.

          The development of novel therapies to control diseases caused by antibiotic-resistant pathogens is one of the major challenges we are currently facing. Many important plant, animal, and human pathogens regulate virulence by quorum sensing, bacterial cell-to-cell communication with small signal molecules. Consequently, a significant research effort is being undertaken to identify and use quorum-sensing-interfering agents in order to control diseases caused by these pathogens. In this review, an overview of our current knowledge of quorum-sensing systems of Gram-negative model pathogens is presented as well as the link with virulence of these pathogens, and recent advances and challenges in the development of quorum-sensing-interfering therapies are discussed.
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            Bacteriocins of gram-positive bacteria.

            In recent years, a group of antibacterial proteins produced by gram-positive bacteria have attracted great interest in their potential use as food preservatives and as antibacterial agents to combat certain infections due to gram-positive pathogenic bacteria. They are ribosomally synthesized peptides of 30 to less than 60 amino acids, with a narrow to wide antibacterial spectrum against gram-positive bacteria; the antibacterial property is heat stable, and a producer strain displays a degree of specific self-protection against its own antibacterial peptide. In many respects, these proteins are quite different from the colicins and other bacteriocins produced by gram-negative bacteria, yet customarily they also are grouped as bacteriocins. Although a large number of these bacteriocins (or bacteriocin-like inhibitory substances) have been reported, only a few have been studied in detail for their mode of action, amino acid sequence, genetic characteristics, and biosynthesis mechanisms. Nevertheless, in general, they appear to be translated as inactive prepeptides containing an N-terminal leader sequence and a C-terminal propeptide component. During posttranslational modifications, the leader peptide is removed. In addition, depending on the particular type, some amino acids in the propeptide components may undergo either dehydration and thioether ring formation to produce lanthionine and beta-methyl lanthionine (as in lantibiotics) or thio ester ring formation to form cystine (as in thiolbiotics). Some of these steps, as well as the translocation of the molecules through the cytoplasmic membrane and producer self-protection against the homologous bacteriocin, are mediated through specific proteins (enzymes). Limited genetic studies have shown that the structural gene for such a bacteriocin and the genes encoding proteins associated with immunity, translocation, and processing are present in a cluster in either a plasmid, the chromosome, or a transposon. Following posttranslational modification and depending on the pH, the molecules may either be released into the environment or remain bound to the cell wall. The antibacterial action against a sensitive cell of a gram-positive strain is produced principally by destabilization of membrane functions. Under certain conditions, gram-negative bacterial cells can also be sensitive to some of these molecules. By application of site-specific mutagenesis, bacteriocin variants which may differ in their antimicrobial spectrum and physicochemical characteristics can be produced. Research activity in this field has grown remarkably but sometimes with an undisciplined regard for conformity in the definition, naming, and categorization of these molecules and their genetic effectors. Some suggestions for improved standardization of nomenclature are offered.
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              Basic aspects of food preservation by hurdle technology.

              Hurdle technology is used in industrialized as well as in developing countries for the gentle but effective preservation of foods. Previously hurdle technology, i.e., a combination of preservation methods, was used empirically without much knowledge of the governing principles. Since about 20 years the intelligent application of hurdle technology became more prevalent, because the principles of major preservative factors for foods (e.g., temperature, pH, a(w), Eh, competitive flora), and their interactions, became better known. Recently, the influence of food preservation methods on the physiology and behaviour of microorganisms in foods, i.e. their homeostasis, metabolic exhaustion, stress reactions, are taken into account, and the novel concept of multitarget food preservation emerged. In the present contribution a brief introduction is given on the potential hurdles for foods, the hurdle effect, and the hurdle technology. However, emphasis is placed on the homeostasis, metabolic exhaustion, and stress reactions of microorganisms related to hurdle technology, and the prospects of the future goal of a multitarget preservation of foods.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Heliyon
                Heliyon
                Heliyon
                Elsevier
                2405-8440
                22 September 2020
                September 2020
                22 September 2020
                : 6
                : 9
                : e05020
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Food Science and Technology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA
                [b ]Botany and Microbiology Department, Faculty of Science, Benha University, Benha, 13511, Egypt
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. ahmed.abdelhamid@ 123456fsc.bu.edu.eg
                Article
                S2405-8440(20)31863-6 e05020
                10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e05020
                7511826
                32995651
                c9eaf31c-8676-482c-bc11-ed2dac9a621b
                © 2020 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 15 April 2020
                : 2 June 2020
                : 18 September 2020
                Categories
                Review Article

                food science,food safety,microbiology,foodborne pathogens,food preservation,antimicrobial technologies,antivirulence strategy,natural antimicrobials

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