Microbes in Our Food, an Ongoing Problem with New Solutions

Despite an increasing number of techniques that are designed to mitigate microbial contamination of food and the resulting food borne disease outbreaks, the United States and many other countries across the world continue to experience impressive numbers of such outbreaks. Microbial contamination ca...

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Main Author: Birgit M. Prüβ
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-09-01
Series:Antibiotics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6382/9/9/584
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spelling doaj-72c417830cb54a4893cbf3f6753fa1072020-11-25T02:30:43ZengMDPI AGAntibiotics2079-63822020-09-01958458410.3390/antibiotics9090584Microbes in Our Food, an Ongoing Problem with New SolutionsBirgit M. Prüβ0Department of Microbiological Sciences, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND 58104, USADespite an increasing number of techniques that are designed to mitigate microbial contamination of food and the resulting food borne disease outbreaks, the United States and many other countries across the world continue to experience impressive numbers of such outbreaks. Microbial contamination can occur during activities that take place in the pre-harvest environment or in the processing facility post-harvest. Current treatments of food that are aimed at reducing bacterial numbers may be only partially effective because of the development of bacterial resistance, the formation of bacterial biofilms, and inactivation of the treatment compound by the food products themselves. This Special Issue will include basic research approaches that are aimed at enhancing our understanding of how contamination occurs throughout the food processing chain, as well as more immediate and applied approaches to the development and use of novel anti-microbials to combat microbes in food. Novel techniques that aim to evaluate the efficacy of novel anti-microbials are included. Overall, we present a broad spectrum of novel approaches to reduce microbial contamination on food at all stages of production.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6382/9/9/584food borne microbial diseasenovel anti-microbials
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Birgit M. Prüβ
spellingShingle Birgit M. Prüβ
Microbes in Our Food, an Ongoing Problem with New Solutions
Antibiotics
food borne microbial disease
novel anti-microbials
author_facet Birgit M. Prüβ
author_sort Birgit M. Prüβ
title Microbes in Our Food, an Ongoing Problem with New Solutions
title_short Microbes in Our Food, an Ongoing Problem with New Solutions
title_full Microbes in Our Food, an Ongoing Problem with New Solutions
title_fullStr Microbes in Our Food, an Ongoing Problem with New Solutions
title_full_unstemmed Microbes in Our Food, an Ongoing Problem with New Solutions
title_sort microbes in our food, an ongoing problem with new solutions
publisher MDPI AG
series Antibiotics
issn 2079-6382
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Despite an increasing number of techniques that are designed to mitigate microbial contamination of food and the resulting food borne disease outbreaks, the United States and many other countries across the world continue to experience impressive numbers of such outbreaks. Microbial contamination can occur during activities that take place in the pre-harvest environment or in the processing facility post-harvest. Current treatments of food that are aimed at reducing bacterial numbers may be only partially effective because of the development of bacterial resistance, the formation of bacterial biofilms, and inactivation of the treatment compound by the food products themselves. This Special Issue will include basic research approaches that are aimed at enhancing our understanding of how contamination occurs throughout the food processing chain, as well as more immediate and applied approaches to the development and use of novel anti-microbials to combat microbes in food. Novel techniques that aim to evaluate the efficacy of novel anti-microbials are included. Overall, we present a broad spectrum of novel approaches to reduce microbial contamination on food at all stages of production.
topic food borne microbial disease
novel anti-microbials
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6382/9/9/584
work_keys_str_mv AT birgitmprub microbesinourfoodanongoingproblemwithnewsolutions
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