4.6 Article

Fungal Endophytes: A Potential Source of Antibacterial Compounds

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof8020164

Keywords

endophytic fungi; antibacterial compound; natural product; drug resistance; medicinal plant; AMR

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Antibiotic resistance is a pressing issue due to the frequent use of antibiotics, and the enhancement of antimicrobial resistance is strengthening the pathogenicity of infectious microbes. Bioactive metabolites with unique skeletons found in endophytic fungi may be helpful in preventing the increase of antimicrobial resistance.
Antibiotic resistance is becoming a burning issue due to the frequent use of antibiotics for curing common bacterial infections, indicating that we are running out of effective antibiotics. This has been more obvious during recent corona pandemics. Similarly, enhancement of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is strengthening the pathogenicity and virulence of infectious microbes. Endophytes have shown expression of various new many bioactive compounds with significant biological activities. Specifically, in endophytic fungi, bioactive metabolites with unique skeletons have been identified which could be helpful in the prevention of increasing antimicrobial resistance. The major classes of metabolites reported include anthraquinone, sesquiterpenoid, chromone, xanthone, phenols, quinones, quinolone, piperazine, coumarins and cyclic peptides. In the present review, we reported 451 bioactive metabolites isolated from various groups of endophytic fungi from January 2015 to April 2021 along with their antibacterial profiling, chemical structures and mode of action. In addition, we also discussed various methods including epigenetic modifications, co-culture, and OSMAC to induce silent gene clusters for the production of noble bioactive compounds in endophytic fungi.

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