Incorporating the Gut Microbiome in the Risk Assessment of Xenobiotics and Identifying Beneficial Components for One Health
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ampatzoglou, Antonios; Gruszecka-Kosowska, Agnieszka Malgorzata; Torres Sánchez, Alfonso; López Moreno, Ana; Cerk, Klara; Ortiz Sandoval, Pilar; Monteoliva Sánchez, Mercedes; Aguilera Gómez, MargaritaEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
one health gut microbiome xenobiotics
Fecha
2022-05-04Referencia bibliográfica
Ampatzoglou A, Gruszecka-Kosowska A, Torres-Sánchez A, López-Moreno A, Cerk K, Ortiz P, Monteoliva-Sánchez M and Aguilera M (2022) Incorporating the Gut Microbiome in the Risk Assessment of Xenobiotics and Identifying Beneficial Components for One Health. Front. Microbiol. 13:872583. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.872583
Patrocinador
EU-FORA Program (Cycle 2020/2021 and 2021/2022); FEDER-Microbiota Infrastructure: IE19_198 UGR, OBEMIRISK EFSA-Partnering Grant GP/EFSA/ENCO/2018/03- GA04; Europa Investigación EIN2019-103082; BIO190 Group Junta de Andalucia; Plan Propio (University of Granada)Resumen
Three areas of relevance to the gut microbiome in the context of One Health were
explored; the incorporation of the microbiome in food safety risk assessment of
xenobiotics; the identification and application of beneficial microbial components to
various areas under One Health, and; specifically, in the context of antimicrobial
resistance. Although challenging, focusing on the microbiota resilience, function and
active components is critical for advancing the incorporation of microbiome data
in the risk assessment of xenobiotics. Moreover, the human microbiota may be a
promising source of beneficial components, with the potential to metabolize xenobiotics.
These may have possible applications in several areas, e.g., in animals or plants
for detoxification or in the environment for biodegradation. This approach would be
of particular interest for antimicrobials, with the potential to ameliorate antimicrobial
resistance development. Finally, the concept of resistance to xenobiotics in the context
of the gut microbiome may deserve further investigation.