Abstract
The emergence of drug resistant microorganisms causes a lot of concern particularly in this era marked by a growing array of
new microbial infections. A good number of existing antibiotics has been rendered ineffective and as a consequence there is an
aggressive search for novel antibiotics with properties that tackle this rapidly growing menace. The human microbiome is a
source for the discovery of such antibiotics with rare properties. This paper seeks to review the existing body of knowledge on
the human microbiome as a source for antibiotic discovery. The human microbiome is the complete set of genes of all
microorganisms that live in or around the body. Because most of these organisms are uncultivable, culture-independent methods
such as metagenomics are employed for the functional study of their genomes. Metagenomics, a fast and rapidly growing field
of research in Microbiology, is the application of modern genomic techniques to study communities of microorganisms directly
in their natural environment, circumventing the need for laboratory cultivation of individual species and it could take any of two
approaches: sequence-based or functional approach. With the Metagenomic study of the human microbiome, some antibiotics
such as Lactocillin(sequence-based genome mining), Commendamide (functional genome mining), Lugdunin (functional
screening) and Humimycins (bioinformatics modeling and chemical synthesis) have been discovered and these antibiotics have
been proved useful. Hence, the human microbiome presents an interesting frontier for antibiotics discovery. Although this field
of research is still in its infancy, it has prospects of developing with time.

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