Framing the future with bacteriophages in agriculture

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.3390/v10050218

Language of the publication
English
Date
2018-04-25
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Svircev, Antonet
  • Roach, Dwayne
  • Castle, Alan
Publisher
MDPI

Abstract

The ability of agriculture to continually provide food to a growing world population is of crucial importance. Bacterial diseases of plants and animals have continually reduced production since the advent of crop cultivation and animal husbandry practices. Antibiotics have been used extensively to mitigate these losses. The rise of antimicrobial resistant (AMR) bacteria, however, together with consumers’ calls for antibiotic-free products, presents problems that threaten sustainable agriculture. Bacteriophages (phages) are proposed as bacterial population control alternatives to antibiotics. Their unique properties make them highly promising but challenging antimicrobials. The use of phages in agriculture also presents a number of unique challenges. This mini-review summarizes recent development and perspectives of phages used as antimicrobial agents in plant and animal agriculture at the farm level. The main pathogens and their adjoining phage therapies are discussed.

Subject

  • Agriculture

Rights

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
1999-4915

Article

Journal title
Viruses
Journal volume
10
Journal issue
5
Article number
218
Accepted date
2018-04-22
Submitted date
2018-03-27

Citation(s)

Svircev, A., Roach, D., & Castle, A. (2018). Framing the future with bacteriophages in agriculture. Viruses, 10(5), 218. https://doi.org/10.3390/v10050218

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Collection(s)

Biology

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