Abstract
Antibiotics have changed human health and revolutionised medical practice since the Second World War. Today, the use of antibiotics is increasingly limited by the rise of antimicrobial-resistant strains. Additionally, broad-spectrum antibiotic activity is not adapted to maintaining a balanced microbiome essential for human health. Targeted antimicrobials could overcome these two drawbacks. Although the rational design of targeted antimicrobial molecules presents a formidable challenge, in nature, targeted genetically encoded killing molecules are used by microbes in their natural ecosystems. The use of a synthetic biology approach allows the harnessing of these natural functions. In this commentary article we illustrate the potential of applying synthetic biology towards bacteriocins to design a new generation of antimicrobials.
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Jaumaux, F., de Cadiñanos, L. P. G., & Gabant, P. (2020). In the age of synthetic biology, will antimicrobial peptides be the next generation of antibiotics? Antibiotics, 9(8), 1–13. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9080484
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