About this Research Topic
Food safety and quality management regimes typically employ traditional methods for microbial detection and characterization, which have known limitations including levels of detection and resolution. Genomics and metagenomics methods have numerous benefits that overcome these limitations, offering potential applications that could improve food safety, quality, and sustainability. Nevertheless, other limitations must be addressed, including standardization and best practices for food applications.
The goal of this Research Topic is to critically evaluate applications of new nucleotide sequencing technologies and analysis techniques in food quality and safety throughout the food value chain. This encompasses genomics and metagenomics applications that span raw materials production to final products. Efforts to make genomics and metagenomics technologies accessible and standardized are welcome if they demonstrate added value in farm-to-fork.
Suitable topics include any applications of 2nd- and 3rd-generation sequencing technologies for genomics and metagenomics in food microbiology, e.g., genomics of foodborne pathogens or beneficial food microbes, bioinformatics techniques and digital resources with specific applications in food quality and safety, foods as model systems for microbial ecology, and genomics and metagenomics applications in food fermentation. The focus is on Original Research articles, but other article types (Original Research, Review, Mini-Review, Method, Perspective, Hypothesis and Theory, and Opinion) will be considered.
Caroline Barretto is currently Senior Bioinformatics Specialist at Nestlé Institute of Food Safety and Analytical Sciences
Keywords: Genomics, metagenomics, microbiome, food quality, food safety, food processing, fermentation, agriculture, microbial ecology, soil ecology, green label, shelf-life monitoring, spoilage management, phages, bacteriophages, culturomics
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