Phage Therapy

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Introduction

Electron micrograph of the Ebola Zaire virus. This was the first photo ever taken of the virus, on 10/13/1976. By Dr. F.A. Murphy, now at U.C. Davis, then at the CDC.


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Legend/credit: Electron micrograph of the Ebola Zaire virus. This was the first photo ever taken of the virus, on 10/13/1976. By Dr. F.A. Murphy, now at U.C. Davis, then at the CDC.
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Electron micrograph of a bacteriophage. Source: bio.davidson.edu.


Bacteriophages are viruses that infect bacteria. Phage therapy takes advantage of this particular group of viruses in a relatively simple way; it aims to treat bacterial infections through the application of such phages. Bacteriophages have many potential applications in biotechnology that are currently being explored such as being used as delivery vehicles for vaccines and gene therapy, detecting bacterial pathogens, and as a way to screen libraries of peptides or antibodies.


History


Phage therapy was first attempted soon after the discovery of bacteriophages in about 1919, but some early inconsistent and unsuccessful results led to a waning of research interest, especially in the West (Clark and March 2006). Antibiotics were also being discovered around this time, which looked more promising, so research on bacteriophages only continued in some parts of the world (Inal 2003). This has led to the emergence of Georgia as the forerunner in phage therapy. There are several reasons why the early trials in bacteriophage therapy were unsuccessful (Weld et al 2004). For one, phage biology was poorly understood, and therefore the wrong phage or the wrong concentration of phage may have been given to treat an infection. Another limiting factor to the success of early therapeutic uses of phage is that the preparations of phage to be administered were all too commonly contaminated or did not contain enough viable viruses to be effective. Lastly, early attempts were not consistently effective because sometimes the wrong phage would be employed or they would choose phage-resistant bacteria to study. Current thinking to avoid this issue involves using cocktails of slightly different bacteriophages to target all of the pathogenic bacteria, even those with mutations or plasmids protecting them from certain phage. Though it is less likely that these same mistakes will be encountered in current use of bacteriophages in a therapeutic setting, there still need to be significant research programs undertaken before phage therapy will be fit for widespread use (Weld et al 2004).

Mechanism of action

Delivery to targeted pathogens


When phages were first discovered and applied in a clinical setting for the treatment of diseases, they were injected in the vicinity of the infection. Later mechanisms of delivery included topical administration 3 times a day, eye drops, or orally before meals (Inal 2003). Phages, unlike many antibiotic molecules, are not diffusible across membranes and must therefore have a method of delivery to the target cells. Some researchers believe that the best delivery mechanism may lie in using other nonpathogenic species of bacteria to bring the phage to its pathogenic target.


A study by Broxmeyer et al (2002) investigated the effectiveness of phage treatment of an intracellular human pathogen by using a mouse model. The study tested the ability of a mycobacteriophage delivered by a nonvirulent mycobacterium to kill Mycobacterium avium and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. These disease are common in sufferers of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and though there have been some advancements in treatment in recent years, their effectiveness is limited by drug resistance and the fact that most of their modes of action require that the target is not in a dormant period. The researchers used vacuoles within macrophages to deliver the phage and found that treatment of M. avium-infected and to an even greater extent M. tuberculosis- infected cells with the phage resulted in decreased bacterial numbers (Figure 1). They capitalized on the fact that infecting macrophages with both M. avium and Mycobacterium smegmatis (the delivery bacteria for the TM4 lytic phage) leads to fusion of the vacuoles of the two, which in turn results in delivery of the phage to the target pathogenic bacteria. A decrease in M. avium number was seen when treated with the delivery bacteria, but a far greater decrease was seen when it was coinfected with the delivery bacteria plus the TM4 phage (Figure 1). (Broxmeyer et al 2002). This study provides promising support to the potential for the use of other bacteria as a delivery mechanism for bacteriophages to treat pathogenic diseases.

Comparison to antibiotics

Advantages


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Disadvantages


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Section 3


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Conclusion


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References

Broxmeyer, L., Sosnowska, D., Miltner, E., Chacon, O., Wagner, D., McGarvey, J., Barletta, R.G., and Bermudez, L.E. "Killing of Mycobacterium avium and Mycobacterium tuberculosis by a Mycobacteriophage Delivered by a Nonvirulent Mycobacterium: A Model for Phage Therapy of Intracellular Bacterial Pathogens". The Journal of Infectious Diseases. 2002. Volume 186, Number 8. p. 1155-1160.

Clark, J.R. and March, J.B. "Bacteriophages and biotechnology: vaccines, gene therapy and antibacterials". TRENDS in Biotechnology. 2006. Volume 24, Number 5. p. 212-218.

Inal, J.M. "Phage Therapy: a Reappraisal of Bacteriophages as Antibiotics". Archivum Immunologiae et Therapiae Experimentalis. 2003. Volume 51. p. 237-244.

Weld, R.J., Butts, C., and Heinemann, J.A. "Models of phage growth and their applicability to phage therapy". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 2004. Volume 227. p. 1-11.