Abstract

Bacteria that cause life-threatening infections in humans are becoming increasingly difficult to treat. In some instances, this is due to intrinsic and acquired antibiotic resistance, indicating that new therapeutic approaches are needed to combat bacterial pathogens. There is renewed interest in utilizing viruses of bacteria known as bacteriophages (phages) as potential antibacterial therapeutics. However, critics suggest that similar to antibiotics, the development of phage-resistant bacteria will halt clinical phage therapy. Although the emergence of phage-resistant bacteria is likely inevitable, there is a growing body of literature showing that phage selective pressure promotes mutations in bacteria that allow them to subvert phage infection, but with a cost to their fitness. Such fitness trade-offs include reduced virulence, resensitization to antibiotics, and colonization defects. Resistance to phage nucleic acid entry, primarily via cell surface modifications, compromises bacterial fitness during antibiotic and host immune system pressure. In this minireview, we explore the mechanisms behind phage resistance in bacterial pathogens and the physiological consequences of acquiring phage resistance phenotypes. With this knowledge, it may be possible to use phages to alter bacterial populations, making them more tractable to current therapeutic strategies.

Highlights

  • Bacteria that cause life-threatening infections in humans are becoming increasingly difficult to treat

  • While arms race dynamics have been classically observed in laboratory phage-bacterium experiments [4], renewed interest in the fitness costs associated with phage resistance has identified fluctuating selection dynamics as a competing concept for host-parasite dynamics over longer evolutionary periods [2, 5]

  • CONCLUDING REMARKS The fitness trade-offs incurred by phage resistance in pathogenic bacteria offer opportunities for novel intervention strategies for treating recalcitrant infections

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Summary

Introduction

Bacteria that cause life-threatening infections in humans are becoming increasingly difficult to treat. By taking advantage of bacterial resistance, phage therapy can steer pathogenic bacteria toward deleterious surface mutations that allow for more favorable treatment outcomes [20]. Phages must bind to the surface of their susceptible host by accessing cell wall-associated molecules that serve as receptors [25].

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