Abstract

Phage therapy is a century-old technique employing viruses (phages) to treat bacterial infections, and in the clinic it is often used in combination with antibiotics. Antibiotics, however, interfere with critical bacterial metabolic activities that can be required by phages. Explicit testing of antibiotic antagonism of phage infection activities, though, is not a common feature of phage therapy studies. Here we use optical density-based ‘lysis-profile’ assays to assess the impact of two antibiotics, colistin and ciprofloxacin, on the bactericidal, bacteriolytic, and new-virion-production activities of three Pseudomonas aeruginosa phages. Though phages and antibiotics in combination are more potent in killing P. aeruginosa than either acting alone, colistin nevertheless substantially interferes with phage bacteriolytic and virion-production activities even at its minimum inhibitory concentration (1× MIC). Ciprofloxacin, by contrast, has little anti-phage impact at 1× or 3× MIC. We corroborate these results with more traditional measures, particularly colony-forming units, plaque-forming units, and one-step growth experiments. Our results suggest that ciprofloxacin could be useful as a concurrent phage therapy co-treatment especially when phage replication is required for treatment success. Lysis-profile assays also appear to be useful, fast, and high-throughput means of assessing antibiotic antagonism of phage infection activities.

Highlights

  • Semi-automated, lysis profile-based workflow (Figure 1), we assessed the impact of two antibiotics, colistin or ciprofloxacin, on P. aeruginosa phage PEV2 infection activities

  • Unlike most other studies that have found some compatibility between ciprofloxacin and phage treatments, here we measured antagonism under conditions that are equivalent to determinations of minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs), including the use of planktonic bacteria and Mueller-Hinton broth

  • We found that ciprofloxacin could be well suited for concurrent antibiotic-phage therapy co-treatment vs. colistin

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Summary

Introduction

We use optical density-based ‘lysis-profile’ assays to assess the impact of two antibiotics, colistin and ciprofloxacin, on the bactericidal, bacteriolytic, and new-virion-production activities of three Pseudomonas aeruginosa phages. Though antibiotic therapy came to represent the standard of care for the treatment of these infections, its utility is threatened by the emergence of multi/pan-drug resistant or tolerant pathogens [6,7]. This has led to increased health care expenses and economic damages that are comparable to those of the 2008–2009 global financial crisis [8]

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