Phage cocktails – an emerging approach for the control of bacterial infection with major emphasis on foodborne pathogens.

Autor: Teklemariam, Addisu D., Al Hindi, Rashad, Qadri, Ishtiaq, Alharbi, Mona G., Hashem, Anwar M., Alrefaei, Abdullah A., Basamad, Najlaa A., Haque, Shafiul, Alamri, Turki, Harakeh, Steve
Zdroj: Biotechnology & Genetic Engineering Reviews; Apr2024, Vol. 40 Issue 1, p36-64, 29p
Abstrakt: Phage therapy has recently attracted a great deal of attention to counteract the rapid emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. In comparison to monophage therapy, phage cocktails are typically used to treat individual and/or multi-bacterial infections since the bacterial agents are unlikely to become resistant as a result of exposure to multiple phages simultaneously. The bacteriolytic effect of phage cocktails may produce efficient killing effect in comparison to individual phage. However, multiple use of phages (complex cocktails) may lead to undesirable side effects such as dysbiosis, horizontal gene transfer, phage resistance, cross resistance, and/or higher cost of production. Cocktail formulation, therefore, representa compromise between limiting the complexity of the cocktail and achieving substantial bacterial load reduction towards the targeted host organisms. Despite some constraints, the applications of monophage therapy have been well documented in the literature. However, phage cocktails-based approaches and their role for the control of pathogens have not been well investigated. In this review, we discuss the principle of phage cocktail formulations, their optimization strategies, major phage cocktail preparations, and their efficacy in inactivating various food borne bacterial pathogens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Supplemental Index