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Coral aquaculture to support drug discovery
Leal, Miguel C; Sheridan, Christopher; Calado, Ricardo et al.
2013In Trends in Biotechnology, 31 (10), p. 555-561
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Abstract :
[en] Marine natural products (NP) are unanimously acknowledged as the 'blue gold' in the urgent quest for new pharmaceuticals. Although corals are among the marine organisms with the greatest diversity of secondary metabolites, growing evidence suggest that their symbiotic bacteria produce most of these bioactive metabolites. The ex hospite culture of coral symbiotic microbiota is extremely challenging and only limited examples of successful culture exist today. By contrast, in toto aquaculture of corals is a commonly applied technology to produce corals for aquaria. Here, we suggest that coral aquaculture could as well be a viable and economically feasible option to produce the biomass required to execute the first steps of the NP-based drug discovery pipeline.
Disciplines :
Pharmacy, pharmacology & toxicology
Biotechnology
Phytobiology (plant sciences, forestry, mycology...)
Author, co-author :
Leal, Miguel C
Sheridan, Christopher ;  Université de Mons > Faculté des Sciences > Biologie des Organismes Marins et Biomimétisme
Calado, Ricardo
Alimonti, Andrea
Osinga, Ronald
Language :
English
Title :
Coral aquaculture to support drug discovery
Publication date :
01 October 2013
Journal title :
Trends in Biotechnology
ISSN :
0167-7799
Publisher :
Elsevier, Netherlands
Volume :
31
Issue :
10
Pages :
555-561
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Research unit :
S864 - Biologie des Organismes Marins et Biomimétisme
Research institute :
R100 - Institut des Biosciences
Available on ORBi UMONS :
since 08 January 2014

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