4.6 Review

Biofilm Formation and Control of Foodborne Pathogenic Bacteria

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 28, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules28062432

Keywords

foodborne pathogens; food safety; biofilm; resistance; quorum-sensing

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Biofilms are aggregation membranes formed by microorganisms on living or nonliving surfaces, providing protection and resistance to antimicrobial agents. If foodborne pathogens form biofilms, the risk of foodborne disease infections can greatly increase, posing significant public health and economic risks. Therefore, research on biofilms and their removal strategies are crucial in the food industry.
Biofilms are microbial aggregation membranes that are formed when microorganisms attach to the surfaces of living or nonliving things. Importantly, biofilm properties provide microorganisms with protection against environmental pressures and enhance their resistance to antimicrobial agents, contributing to microbial persistence and toxicity. Thus, bacterial biofilm formation is part of the bacterial survival mechanism. However, if foodborne pathogens form biofilms, the risk of foodborne disease infections can be greatly exacerbated, which can cause major public health risks and lead to adverse economic consequences. Therefore, research on biofilms and their removal strategies are very important in the food industry. Food waste due to spoilage within the food industry remains a global challenge to environmental sustainability and the security of food supplies. This review describes bacterial biofilm formation, elaborates on the problem associated with biofilms in the food industry, enumerates several kinds of common foodborne pathogens in biofilms, summarizes the current strategies used to eliminate or control harmful bacterial biofilm formation, introduces the current and emerging control strategies, and emphasizes future development prospects with respect to bacterial biofilms.

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