"Stop, Little Pot" as the Motto of Suppressive Management of Various Microbial Consortia

The unresolved challenges in the development of highly efficient, stable and controlled synthetic microbial consortia, as well as the use of natural consortia, are very attractive for science and technology. However, the consortia management should be done with the knowledge of how not only to accel...

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Published inMicroorganisms (Basel) Vol. 12; no. 8; p. 1650
Main Authors Efremenko, Elena, Stepanov, Nikolay, Senko, Olga, Maslova, Olga, Lyagin, Ilya, Domnin, Maksim, Aslanli, Aysel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 12.08.2024
MDPI
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Summary:The unresolved challenges in the development of highly efficient, stable and controlled synthetic microbial consortia, as well as the use of natural consortia, are very attractive for science and technology. However, the consortia management should be done with the knowledge of how not only to accelerate but also stop the action of such "little pots". Moreover, there are a lot of microbial consortia, the activity of which should be suppressively controlled. The processes, catalyzed by various microorganisms being in complex consortia which should be slowed down or completely cancelled, are typical for the environment (biocorrosion, landfill gas accumulation, biodegradation of building materials, water sources deterioration etc.), industry (food and biotechnological production), medical practice (vaginitis, cystitis, intestinal dysbiosis, etc.). The search for ways to suppress the functioning of heterogeneous consortia in each of these areas is relevant. The purpose of this review is to summarize the general trends in these studies regarding the targets and new means of influence used. The analysis of the features of the applied approaches to solving the main problem confirms the possibility of obtaining a combined effect, as well as selective influence on individual components of the consortia. Of particular interest is the role of viruses in suppressing the functioning of microbial consortia of different compositions.
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ISSN:2076-2607
2076-2607
DOI:10.3390/microorganisms12081650