Abstract

Bacteriophages are bacterial cell-borne viruses that act as natural bacteria killers and they have been identified as therapeutic antibacterial agents. Bacteriophage therapy is a bacterial disease medication that is given to humans after a diagnosis of the disease to prevent and manage a number of bacterial infections. The ability of phage to invade and destroy their target bacterial host cells determines the efficacy of bacteriophage therapy. Bacteriophage therapy, which can be specific or nonspecific and can include a single phage or a cocktail of phages, is a safe treatment choice for antibiotic-resistant and recurrent bacterial infections after antibiotics have failed. A therapy is a cure for health problems, which is administered after the diagnosis of the diseases in the patient. Such non-antibiotic treatment approaches for drug-resistant bacteria are thought to be a promising new alternative to antibiotic therapy and vaccination. The occurrence, biology, morphology, infectivity, lysogenic and lytic behaviours, efficacy, and mechanisms of bacteriophages’ therapeutic potentials for control and treatment of multidrug-resistant/sensitive bacterial infections are discussed. Isolation, long-term storage and recovery of lytic bacteriophages, bioassays, in vivo and in vitro experiments, and bacteriophage therapy validation are all identified. Holins, endolysins, ectolysins, and bacteriocins are bacteriophage antibacterial enzymes that are specific. Endolysins cause the target bacterium to lyse instantly, and hence their therapeutic potential has been explored in “Endolysin therapy.” Endolysins have a high degree of biochemical variability, with certain lysins having a wider bactericidal function than antibiotics, while their bactericidal activities are far narrower. Bacteriophage recombinant lysins (chimeric streptococcal–staphylococcal constructs) have high specificity for a single bacterial species, killing only that species (lysin (CF-301) is focused to kill methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)), while other lysins have a broader lytic activity, killing several different bacterial species and hence the range of bactericidal activity. New advances in medicine, food safety, agriculture, and biotechnology demonstrate molecular engineering, such as the optimization of endolysins for particular applications. Small molecule antibiotics are replaced by lysins. The chapter discusses the occurrences of lytic phage in pathogenic bacteria in animals and humans, as well as the possible therapeutic effects of endolysins-bacteriophage therapy in vivo and in vitro, demonstrating the utility and efficacy of the therapy. Further developments in the bacteriophage assay, unique molecular-phage therapy, or a cocktail of phage for the control of a broad range of drug-resistant bacteria-host systems can promote non-antibiotic treatment methods as a viable alternative to conventional antibiotic therapy.

Highlights

  • Bacteriophages are bacterial viruses that are known as ‘natural killer phages’ may take over their bacterial host and use it to grow and multiply

  • Bacteriophages are used to (a) identify specific pathogens to help in pathogen detection and (b) destroy bacterial infections in a process known as lysogeny, in which one bacterium kills another through phage particles [1–4]

  • In vitro lytic activity of phages on isolated bacteria revealed 70% coverage of 33 isolated antibiotic-resistant strains, of which 50% targeted multiple phages. These results suggest the possibility of phage detection by strong action against antibiotic-resistant KP strains and may furnish a new therapeutic approach to the treatment of ESBL and Carbapenem resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) infections [115]

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Summary

Introduction

Bacteriophages (phage) are bacterial viruses that are known as ‘natural killer phages’ may take over their bacterial host and use it to grow and multiply. Bacteriophages are used to (a) identify specific pathogens to help in pathogen detection and (b) destroy bacterial infections in a process known as lysogeny, in which one bacterium kills another through phage particles [1–4]. Existing antibacterial agents were unable to destroy bacteria immune to antibiotics, ushering in the “post-antibiotic” period [9, 14–18, 20–22] Because of their specific antimicrobial activity as an alternative to antibiotics, bacteriophage treatment is gaining popularity as a means of ensuring future development. The ability to combine antibiotic and phage therapy, the use of phage cocktails, and previously unexplored phage protein products are the most promising areas for the effective treatment of drug-resistant bacterial infections. After closely studying the protection and efficacy of phage, promising findings indicate that phage therapy against pathogenic bacteria could be the potential solution to pathogens that affect humans and animals

Market potential of therapeutic bасteriорhаges
Isolation and identification of bacteriophages
Phage library and sensitivity
Production and purification of bacteriophages
T4-like coliphages or a
CM8-1 and SJT-2 Bacteriophage
Storage of phages
Phage therapy
Personalized therapeutic phage
PP1131 -phage cocktail
Cocktail of four Multidrugphages provided by Resistant
Gangrene wounds
Bacteriophage OMKO1
A baumanii bacteriophages
Lytic anti- P aeruginosa bacteriophages
Psoriasis
Diabetes ulcers
Urinary tract infections
Pneumoniae
Pyo bacteriophage cocktail
Pyo bacteriophage
Diarrhoea
Tuberculosis
Endolysin therapy
Chimeric lysin
11. Lysin Ply700
14. PlyC lysin
Side effects
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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