Relevance. Obtaining clean lysis spots, with tolerable presence of individual colonies of secondary growth, in spot tests is a criterion for assessing the effectiveness of therapeutic bacteriophages. At the same time, a number of mechanisms are known by which phage lysis of bacteria on lawns occurs without being accompanied by virus replication.Aim. To assess the ratio of spot test results and tests based on the detection of negative bacteriophage colonies.Conclusion. Data on 43 bacteriophages extracted from 21 articles were analyzed. Within the studied sample, the observation of clean lysis zones in 94% of cases corresponded to successful virus replication. For a number of Escherichia coli bacteriophages, a greater number of spot tests of the "++++" category were detected compared to the number of strains supporting virus replication, which, within the framework of assessing the lytic activity of a therapeutic bacteriophage, can be characterized as false positive spot test results. In general, the observation of clear lysis spots on the spot test in most cases indicates bacteriophage replication, which allows us to consider the spot test method as indicative, but requiring subsequent validation by more complex methods characterizing the efficiency of phage replication.
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