Abstract
In recent years, microbiomes and their potential applications for human, animal or plant health, food production and environmental management came into the spotlight of major national and international policies and strategies. This has been accompanied by substantial R&D investments in both public and private sectors, with an increasing number of products entering the market. Despite widespread agreement on the potential of microbiomes and their uses across disciplines, stakeholders and countries, there is no consensus on what defines a microbiome application. This often results in non-comprehensive communication or insufficient documentation making commercialisation and acceptance of the novel products challenging. To showcase the complexity of this issue we discuss two selected, well-established applications and propose criteria defining a microbiome application and their conditions of use for clear communication, facilitating suitable regulatory frameworks and building trust among stakeholders.Advances in microbiome research have resulted in microbiome applications increasingly entering the market. Commercialisation of these novel applications is associated with challenges, often caused by non-comprehensive communication or insufficient documentation. Criteria defining a microbiome application and their conditions of use for clear communication, facilitating suitable regulatory frameworks and building trust among stakeholders are presented.image
Original language | English |
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Article number | e14550 |
Pages (from-to) | e14550 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | Microbial Biotechnology |
Volume | 17 |
Issue number | 9 |
Publication status | Published - Sept 2024 |
Research Field
- Exploration of Biological Resources
Keywords
- Microbiota
- Humans
- Animals