Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryPeer-reviewed

Microbes Saving Lives and Reducing Suffering.

Timmis K, Karahan ZC, Ramos JL, Koren O, Pérez-Cobas AE, Steward K, de Lorenzo V, Caselli E, Douglas M, Schwab C, Rivero V, Giraldo R, Garmendia J, Turner RJ, Perlmutter J, Borrero de Acuña JM, Nikel PI, Bonnet J, Sessitsch A, Timmis JK, Pruzzo C, Prieto MA, Isazadeh S, Huang WE, Clarke G, Ercolini D, Häggblom M.

Microb Biotechnol · 2025

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Summary

This narrative review, authored by a broad international consortium of microbiologists and biotechnologists, examines the diverse ways in which microorganisms contribute to saving lives and alleviating human suffering. Published in Microbial Biotechnology in 2025, the paper likely draws on evidence spanning clinical microbiology, microbiome research, bioremediation, and agricultural microbiology to make a case for the central importance of microbes to human wellbeing. The breadth of the authorship suggests a deliberately cross-disciplinary synthesis rather than a primary research study.

UK applicability

Given the international authorship and broad scope, the findings are applicable to UK policy and practice across the NHS, agricultural systems, and environmental regulation; UK-based authors or institutions among the contributor list may reflect some UK-specific perspectives, though the paper's framing is likely global in orientation.

Key measures

Breadth of microbial applications reviewed; disease prevention and treatment outcomes; illustrative case examples of microbial interventions across health and environmental domains

Outcomes reported

The paper likely reviews and synthesises evidence on how microorganisms — including probiotics, soil microbes, and engineered bacteria — contribute to reducing disease burden, improving human health outcomes, and supporting life-saving applications across medicine, agriculture, and biotechnology.

Theme
Nutrition & health
Subject
Microbiology & human health
Study type
Narrative Review
Study design
Narrative review
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
International
System type
Human clinical
DOI
10.1111/1751-7915.70068
Catalogue ID
NRmo3f02hq-00d

Topic tags

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