1 Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Biosciences, University for Development Studies, Tamale, Ghana.
2 Department of Physiology, School of Medical Sciences, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 28(03), 1743-1752
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2025.28.3.4228
Received 13 November 2025; revised on 23 December 2025; accepted on 25 December 2025
Microbial secondary metabolites have been an essential source of drug discovery for more than eight decades, and are currently influencing modern medicine, with an estimated half of all approved pharmaceuticals being of microbial natural product origin. Bacteria, fungi and actinomycetes produce these low-molecular-weight compounds, which exhibit remarkable chemical diversity and high biological activity, thus yielding clinically important antibiotics, antifungals, immunosuppressants and anticancer agents. Despite this achievement, therapeutic innovation has been limited by high rediscovery and an abysmal lack of contact between microbial genetic potential and experimentally observed metabolites. Genomic examination of biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) coded in microbial genomes indicates that most are silent or cryptic in standard laboratory environments, and that most environmental microorganisms are recalcitrant to growth, in total representing a huge pool of undiscovered chemical diversity. Recent developments in the field of genome mining, metagenomics, metabolomics, heterologous expression, epigenetic modulation, synthetic biology and gene-editing technologies like CRISPR-Cas9 have changed the discovery of secondary metabolites with systematic predictions, activation, and optimisation of these hidden pathways. This review attempts to synthesize vital insights along with recent computational and experimental studies to challenge microbial secondary metabolite biosynthesis, contemporary discovery strategies, and therapeutic uses.
Secondary Metabolites; Biosynthetic Gene Clusters; Genome Mining; Synthetic Biology; Antimicrobial Resistance; Novel Therapeutics
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Seth Oware and Edward Oware. Harnessing microbial secondary metabolites for modern medicine: A review. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 28(03), 1743-1752. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2025.28.3.4228.
Copyright © 2025 Author(s) retain the copyright of this article. This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Liscense 4.0