Published May 1, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Necrophages and necrophiles: a review of their antibacterial defenses and biotechnological potential

  • 1. Faculty of Medicine, Mahasarakham University, Mahasarakham, Thailand
  • 2. Faculty of Technology, Mahasarakham University, Kantarawichai, Thailand
  • 3. School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK

Description

With antibiotic resistance on the rise, there is an urgent need for new antibacterial drugs and products to treat or prevent infection. Many such products in current use, for example human and veterinary antibiotics and antimicrobial food preservatives, were discovered and developed from nature. Natural selection acts on all living organisms and the presence of bacterial competitors or pathogens in an environment can favor the evolution of antibacterial adaptations. In this review, we ask if vultures, blow flies and other carrion users might be a good starting point for antibacterial discovery based on the selection pressure they are under from bacterial disease. Dietary details are catalogued for over 600 of these species, bacterial pathogens associated with the diets are described, and an overview of the antibacterial defenses contributing to disease protection is given. Biotechnological applications for these defenses are then discussed, together with challenges facing developers and possible solutions. Examples include use of (a) the antimicrobial peptide (AMP) gene sarcotoxin IA to improve crop resistance to bacterial disease, (b) peptide antibiotics such as serrawettin W2 as antibacterial drug leads, (c) lectins for targeted drug delivery, (d) bioconversion-generated chitin as an antibacterial biomaterial, (e) bacteriocins as antibacterial food preservatives and (f) mutualistic microbiota bacteria as alternatives to antibiotics in animal feed. We show that carrion users encounter a diverse range of bacterial pathogens through their diets and interactions, have evolved many antibacterial defenses, and are a promising source of genes, molecules and microbes for medical, agricultural and food industry product development.

Files

Cushnie, Luang-In & Sexton (2024) post-peer reviewed version.pdf

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Additional details

Dates

Available
2024-08-28
Published online ahead of print in August 2024
Issued
2025-05-01
Assigned issue & page numbers in May 2025