About this Research Topic
The consortia of microscopic organisms likewise assume an essential part in molding the natural microbiome. Their metabolites add to natural cycles, like supplement cycling and natural matter decay. Research in not only the positive aspects of bacterial metabolites in ecological balance but also their potential negative impacts, such as the production of secondary metabolites with ecological consequences as well as the emergence of antibiotic resistance in environmental microbial communities is necessary.
The advent of high-throughput metabolomic strategies has revolutionized our capacity to profile and break down the huge range of metabolites related to assorted microbial networks. Through this work we intend to investigate how metabolomics has changed how we might interpret microbial networks, giving bits of knowledge into the useful elements of microbiomes and their effect on human wellbeing as well as the environment. We aim to delve into and discuss the capacity of microbial metabolites, including those from actinobacteria, as remedial specialists, accentuating their part in drug improvement and therapeutic interventions.
All in all, this collection offers to implicate an exhaustive investigation of the microbiome-based metabolomics revolution, enveloping different microbial contributors by unwinding the complexities of microbial collaborations. This collection welcomes themes on, but not limited to:
• Role of microbiome in human functional systems.
• Metabolites with beneficial as well as hindering effects against biomedical aspects.
• Metabolomics in the field of microbiome.
• Molecular and genetic aspects of metabolites.
• Role of cell-to-cell communication relating to production of metabolites.
• Pathways employed for the exhibition of biomedical characteristics as well as metabolite production.
• Personalized medicine and microbiome
• Microbiome and aging
Keywords: Microbiome, Metabolomics, Metabolites, Biomedical
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