Antibiotics are considered "wonder drugs" due to the fact that they are the
most extensively utilised medication in the world. They are used to cure a broad spectrum
of diseases and lethal infections. A variety of bacteria and fungi produce antibiotics as a
result of secondary metabolism; however, their production is dominated by a special class
of bacteria, namely Actinobacteria. Actinobacteria are gram-positive bacteria with high
G+C content and unparalleled antibiotic-producing ability. They produce numerous polyenes, tetracyclines, β-lactams, macrolides, and peptides. Actinobacteria are ubiquitous in
nature and are isolated from various sources, such as marine and terrestrial endophytes of
plants and air. They are studied for their relative antibiotic-producing ability along with
the mechanism that the antibiotics follow to annihilate the pathogenic agents that include
bacteria, fungi, protozoans, helminths, etc. Actinobacteria isolated from endophytes of
medicinal plants have amassed significant attention as they interfere with the metabolism
of medicinal plants and acquire enormous benefits from it in the form of conspicuous
novel antibiotic-producing ability. Actinobacteria is not only an antibiotic but also a rich
source of anticancer compounds that are widely used owing to its remarkable tumorigenic
potential. Today, amongst Actinobacteria, class Streptomyces subjugates the area of antibiotic production, producing 70% of all known antibiotics. The uniqueness of bioactive
Actinobacteria has turned the attention of scientists worldwide in order to explore its potentiality as effective “micronanofactories”. This study provides a brief overview of the
production of antibiotics from Actinobacteria inhabiting diverse environments and the
methods involved in the screening of antibiotics.