Deciphering poultry microbial ecosystems by classical and modern tools

Merino, Natalia (Universidad de Zaragoza) ; Espina, Laura ; Berdejo, Daniel (Universidad de Zaragoza) ; Pagán, Rafael (Universidad de Zaragoza) ; García-Gonzalo, Diego (Universidad de Zaragoza)
Deciphering poultry microbial ecosystems by classical and modern tools
Resumen: Food surveillance programs have traditionally relied on culture-dependent tools for the detection and enumeration of microbial groups along the food chain. While essential, these approaches provide a limited view of complex microbial ecosystems, often underestimating fastidious and viable but non-culturable microorganisms. In recent years, culture-independent tools, including sequencing and omics-based strategies, offer complementary insights into microbial diversity and function. Given the global consumption of poultry meat and its significance for food safety, spoilage, and antimicrobial resistance dissemination, a comprehensive characterization of poultry-associated microbial communities is essential. This review critically examines culture-dependent and culture-independent approaches to study the microbiome, resistome, virulome, and mobilome across the poultry production chain, comparing the type of information generated, their advantages and limitations. Culturedependent methods enable quantification and isolation of viable strains, while culture-independent approaches reveal microbial diversity and functional genes related to antimicrobial resistance, virulence, and genetic mobility. Integrating both strategies strengthens surveillance, improves risk assessment, and supports targeted interventions throughout the poultry sector. This review also highlights key priorities for future research, including greater attention to post-slaughter processing environments, a more systematic investigation of the mobilome and virulome, and the integration of multi-omics, culturomics, and quasi-metagenomics to better link microbial diversity with functional activity and viability.
Idioma: Inglés
DOI: 10.1016/j.fbio.2026.108356
Año: 2026
Publicado en: Food bioscience 77 (2026), 108356 [19 pp.]
ISSN: 2212-4292

Financiación: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/DGA/A06-23R
Financiación: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/MCIU/PID2021-123404NB-I00
Financiación: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/MICIU/PID2024-156601NA-I00
Tipo y forma: Article (Published version)
Área (Departamento): Área Nutrición Bromatología (Dpto. Produc.Animal Cienc.Ali.)
Área (Departamento): Área Tecnología de Alimentos (Dpto. Produc.Animal Cienc.Ali.)


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Exportado de SIDERAL (2026-02-09-14:42:48)


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Este artículo se encuentra en las siguientes colecciones:
Articles > Artículos por área > Nutrición y Bromatología
Articles > Artículos por área > Tecnología de Alimentos



 Record created 2026-02-09, last modified 2026-02-09


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