Bacteriophages and food safety: An updated overview

Author:

Imran Ali1ORCID,Shehzadi Umber1,Islam Fakhar12ORCID,Afzaal Muhammad1,Ali Rehman1,Ali Yuosra Amer3ORCID,Chauhan Anamika45,Biswas Sunanda6,Khurshid Sadaf1,Usman Ifrah1ORCID,Hussain Ghulam7ORCID,Zahra Syeda Mahvish89,Shah Mohd Asif10,Rasool Adil11ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Food Sciences Government College University Faisalabad Pakistan

2. Department of Clinical Nutrition NUR International University Lahore Pakistan

3. Department of Food Sciences, College of Agriculture and Forestry University of Mosul Mosul Iraq

4. Department of Home Science Chaman Lal Mahavidyalaya Landhora Haridwar India

5. Sri Dev Suman University Tehri India

6. Department of Food & Nutrition Acharya Prafulla Chandra College Kolkata India

7. Neurochemicalbiology and Genetics Laboratory (NGL), Department of Physiology, Faculty of Life Sciences Government College University Faisalabad Pakistan

8. Department of Environmental Design, Health and Nutritional Sciences Allama Iqbal Open University Islamabad Pakistan

9. Institute of Food Science and Nutrition University of Sargodha Sargodha Pakistan

10. Adjunct Faculty University Center for Research & Development, Chandigarh University Mohali India

11. Department of Management Bakhtar University Kabul Afghanistan

Abstract

AbstractDespite significant advances in pathogen survival and food cleaning measures, foodborne diseases continue to be the main reason for hospitalization or other fatality globally. Conventional antibacterial techniques including pasteurization, pressurized preparation, radioactivity, as well as synthetic antiseptics could indeed decrease bacterial activity in nutrition to variable levels, despite their serious downsides like an elevated upfront outlay, the possibility of accessing malfunctions due to one corrosiveness, as well as an adverse effect upon those the foodstuffs' organoleptic properties and maybe their nutritional significance. Greatest significantly, these cleansing methods eliminate all contaminants, including numerous (often beneficial) bacteria found naturally in food. A huge amount of scientific publication that discussed the application of virus bioremediation to treat a multitude of pathogenic bacteria in meals spanning between prepared raw food to fresh fruit and vegetables although since initial idea through using retroviruses on meals. Furthermore, the quantity of widely viable bacteriophage‐containing medicines licensed for use in health and safety purposes has continuously expanded. Bacteriophage bio‐control, a leafy and ordinary technique that employs lytic bacteriophages extracted from the atmosphere to selectively target pathogenic bacteria and remove meaningfully decrease their stages meals, is one potential remedy that solves some of these difficulties. It has been suggested that applying bacteriophages to food is a unique method for avoiding bacterial development in vegetables. Because of their selectivity, security, stability, and use, bacteriophages are desirable. Phages have been utilized in post‐harvest activities, either alone or in combination with antimicrobial drugs, since they are effective, strain‐specific, informal to split and manipulate. In this review to ensure food safety, it may be viable to use retroviruses as a spontaneous treatment in the thread pollution of fresh picked fruits and vegetables, dairy, and convenience foods.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Food Science

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