The need for an integrated multi‐OMICs approach in microbiome science in the food system

Author:

Ferrocino Ilario1,Rantsiou Kalliopi1,McClure Ryan2,Kostic Tanja3,de Souza Rafael Soares Correa4,Lange Lene5,FitzGerald Jamie6,Kriaa Aicha7,Cotter Paul6,Maguin Emmanuelle7,Schelkle Bettina8,Schloter Michael9,Berg Gabriele10,Sessitsch Angela3,Cocolin Luca1ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agriculture, Forest and Food Science University of Turin Grugliasco Italy

2. Biological Sciences Division Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Richland Washington USA

3. AIT Austrian Institute of Technology GmbH Bioresources Unit Tulln Austria

4. Genomics for Climate Change Research Center (GCCRC) Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP) Campinas São Paulo Brazil

5. BioEconomy Research & Advisory Valby Denmark

6. Teagasc Food Research Centre, Moorepark Fermoy, County Cork Ireland

7. MICALIS, INRA, AgroParisTech Université Paris‐Saclay Jouy‐en‐Josas France

8. European Food Information Council Brussels Belgium

9. Helmholtz Zentrum München Oberschleissheim Germany

10. Institute of Environmental Biotechnology Graz University of Technology Graz Austria

Abstract

AbstractMicrobiome science as an interdisciplinary research field has evolved rapidly over the past two decades, becoming a popular topic not only in the scientific community and among the general public, but also in the food industry due to the growing demand for microbiome‐based technologies that provide added‐value solutions. Microbiome research has expanded in the context of food systems, strongly driven by methodological advances in different ‐omics fields that leverage our understanding of microbial diversity and function. However, managing and integrating different complex ‐omics layers are still challenging. Within the Coordinated Support Action MicrobiomeSupport (https://www.microbiomesupport.eu/), a project supported by the European Commission, the workshop “Metagenomics, Metaproteomics and Metabolomics: the need for data integration in microbiome research” gathered 70 participants from different microbiome research fields relevant to food systems, to discuss challenges in microbiome research and to promote a switch from microbiome‐based descriptive studies to functional studies, elucidating the biology and interactive roles of microbiomes in food systems. A combination of technologies is proposed. This will reduce the biases resulting from each individual technology and result in a more comprehensive view of the biological system as a whole. Although combinations of different datasets are still rare, advanced bioinformatics tools and artificial intelligence approaches can contribute to understanding, prediction, and management of the microbiome, thereby providing the basis for the improvement of food quality and safety.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Food Science

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