24 results on '"Harhala, Marek"'
Search Results
2. Correlation between COVID-19 severity and previous exposure of patients to Borrelia spp.
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Szewczyk-Dąbrowska, Alina, Budziar, Wiktoria, Harhala, Marek, Baniecki, Krzysztof, Pikies, Aleksandra, Jędruchniewicz, Natalia, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Gembara, Katarzyna, Klimek, Tomasz, Witkiewicz, Wojciech, Nahorecki, Artur, Barczyk, Kamil, Kłak, Marlena, Grata-Borkowska, Urszula, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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- 2022
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3. Experimental Identification of Cross-Reacting IgG Hotspots to Predict Existing Immunity Evasion of SARS-CoV-2 Variants by a New Biotechnological Application of Phage Display.
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Harhala, Marek Adam, Gembara, Katarzyna, Baniecki, Krzysztof, Pikies, Aleksandra, Nahorecki, Artur, Jędruchniewicz, Natalia, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Rybicka, Izabela, Klimek, Tomasz, Witkiewicz, Wojciech, Barczyk, Kamil, Kłak, Marlena, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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SARS-CoV-2 , *IMMUNOGLOBULIN G , *CYTOSKELETAL proteins , *BACTERIOPHAGES , *IMMUNITY , *PROTEIN S - Abstract
Multiple pathogens are competing against the human immune response, leading to outbreaks that are increasingly difficult to control. For example, the SARS-CoV-2 virus continually evolves, giving rise to new variants. The ability to evade the immune system is a crucial factor contributing to the spread of these variants within the human population. With the continuous emergence of new variants, it is challenging to comprehend all the possible combinations of previous infections, various vaccination types, and potential exposure to new variants in an individual patient. Rather than conducting variant-to-variant comparisons, an efficient approach could involve identifying key protein regions associated with the immune evasion of existing immunity against the virus. In this study, we propose a new biotechnological application of bacteriophages, the phage display platform for experimental identification of regions (linear epitopes) that may function as cross-reacting IgG hotspots in SARS-CoV-2 structural proteins. A total of 34,949 epitopes derived from genomes of all SARS-CoV-2 variants deposited prior to our library design were tested in a single assay. Cross-reacting IgG hotspots are protein regions frequently recognized by cross-reacting antibodies in many variants. The assay facilitated the one-step identification of immunogenic regions of proteins that effectively induced specific IgG in SARS-CoV-2-infected patients. We identified four regions demonstrating both significant immunogenicity and the activity of a cross-reacting IgG hotspot in protein S (located at NTD, RBD, HR1, and HR2/TM domains) and two such regions in protein N (at 197–280 and 358–419 aa positions). This novel method for identifying cross-reacting IgG hotspots holds promise for informing vaccine design and serological diagnostics for COVID-19 and other infectious diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Immunogenic epitope scanning in bacteriolytic enzymes Pal and Cpl-1 and engineering Pal to escape antibody responses.
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Adam Harhala, Marek, Gembara, Katarzyna, Rybicka, Izabela, Kaźamierczak, Zuzanna Maria, Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Majewska, Joanna Marta, Budziar, Wiktoria, Nasulewicz-Goldeman, Anna, Nelson, Daniel C., Owczarek, Barbara, and Dabrowska, Krystyna
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STARTLE reaction ,ANTIBODY formation ,NEUTRALIZATION tests ,ENZYMES ,IMMUNE response ,ANTIBACTERIAL agents - Abstract
Bacteriolytic enzymes are promising antibacterial agents, but they can cause a typical immune response in vivo. In this study, we used a targeted modification method for two antibacterial endolysins, Pal and Cpl-1. We identified the key immunogenic amino acids, and designed and tested new, bacteriolytic variants with altered immunogenicity. One new variant of Pal (257-259 MKS → TFG) demonstrated decreased immunogenicity while a similar mutant (257-259 MKS → TFK) demonstrated increased immunogenicity. A third variant (280-282 DKP →GGA) demonstrated significantly increased antibacterial activity and it was not cross-neutralized by antibodies induced by the wild-type enzyme. We propose this variant as a new engineered endolysin with increased antibacterial activity that is capable of escaping cross-neutralization by antibodies induced by wild-type Pal. We show that efficient antibacterial enzymes that avoid cross-neutralization by IgG can be developed by epitope scanning, in silico design, and substitutions of identified key amino acids with a high rate of success. Importantly, this universal approach can be applied to many proteins beyond endolysins and has the potential for design of numerous biological drugs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. New Phage-Derived Antibacterial Enzyme PolaR Targeting Rothia spp.
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Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Barylski, Jakub, Wilczak, Aleksandra, Dragoš, Anna, Rybicka, Izabela, Bałdysz, Sophia, Szymczak, Aleksander, Dogsa, Iztok, Rokush, Kostiantyn, Harhala, Marek Adam, Ciekot, Jarosław, Ferenc, Stanisław, Gnus, Jan, Witkiewicz, Wojciech, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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GASTRIC mucosa ,BIOCOMPLEXITY ,ENZYMES ,BACTERIAL cells ,PSEUDOMONAS aeruginosa ,H2 receptor antagonists - Abstract
Rothia is an opportunistic pathogen, particularly life-threatening for the immunocompromised. It is associated with pneumonia, endocarditis, peritonitis and many other serious infections, including septicemia. Of note, Rothia mucilaginousa produces metabolites that support and increase overgrowth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, one of the ESKAPE bacteria. Endolysins are considered as antibacterial enzymes derived from bacteriophages that selectively and efficiently kill susceptible bacteria without harming human cells or the normal microbiome. Here, we applied a computational analysis of metagenomic sequencing data of the gastric mucosa phageome extracted from human patients' stomach biopsies. A selected candidate anti-Rothia sequence was produced in an expression system, purified and confirmed as a Rothia mucilaginosa- and Rothia dentocariosa-specific endolysin PolaR, able to destroy bacterial cells even when aggregated, as in a biofilm. PolaR had no cytotoxic or antiproliferative effects on mammalian cells. PolaR is the first described endolysin selectively targeting Rothia species, with a high potential to combat infections caused by Rothia mucilaginosa and Rothia dentocariosa, and possibly other bacterial groups. PolaR is the first antibacterial enzyme selected from the gastric mucosa phageome, which underlines the biological complexity and probably underestimated biological role of the phageome in the human gastric mucosa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Biological Properties of 12 Newly Isolated Acinetobacter baumannii -Specific Bacteriophages.
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Bagińska, Natalia, Harhala, Marek Adam, Cieślik, Martyna, Orwat, Filip, Weber-Dąbrowska, Beata, Dąbrowska, Krystyna, Górski, Andrzej, and Jończyk-Matysiak, Ewa
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ACINETOBACTER baumannii , *MULTIDRUG resistance in bacteria , *ANTIBIOTIC overuse , *OPPORTUNISTIC infections , *BACTERIOPHAGES , *TRANSMISSION electron microscopy - Abstract
Infections with the opportunistic Gram-negative bacterium Acinetobacter baumannii pose a serious threat today, which is aggravated by the growing problem of multi-drug resistance among bacteria, caused by the overuse of antibiotics. Treatment of infections caused by antibiotic-resistant A. baumannii strains with the use of phage therapy is not only a promising alternative, but sometimes the only option. Therefore, phages specific for clinical multi-drug resistant A. baumannii were searched for in environmental, municipal, and hospital wastewater samples collected from different locations in Poland. The conducted research allowed us to determine the biological properties and morphology of the tested phages. As a result of our research, 12 phages specific for A. baumannii, 11 of which turned out to be temperate and only one lytic, were isolated. Their lytic spectra ranged from 11 to 75%. The plaques formed by most phages were small and transparent, while one of them formed relatively large plaques with a clearly marked 'halo' effect. Based on Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM), most of our phages have been classified as siphoviruses (only one phage was classified as a podovirus). All phages have icosahedral capsid symmetry, and 11 of them have a long tail. Optimal multiplicity of infections (MOIs) and the adsorption rate were also determined. MOI values varied depending on the phage—from 0.001 to 10. Based on similarities to known bacteriophages, our A. baumannii-specific phages have been proposed to belong to the Beijerinckvirinae and Junivirinae subfamilies. This study provides an additional tool in the fight against this important pathogen and may boost the interest in phage therapy as an alternative and supplement to the current antibiotics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Dynamics of anti-SARS-CoV-2 seroconversion in individual patients and at the population level.
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Szewczyk-Dąbrowska, Alina, Budziar, Wiktoria, Baniecki, Krzysztof, Pikies, Aleksandra, Harhala, Marek, Jędruchniewicz, Natalia, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Gembara, Katarzyna, Klimek, Tomasz, Witkiewicz, Wojciech, Nahorecki, Artur, Barczyk, Kamil, Grata-Borkowska, Urszula, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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SEROCONVERSION ,VACCINATION status ,ANTIBODY formation ,HERD immunity ,MEDICAL screening - Abstract
The immune response and specific antibody production in COVID-19 are among the key factors that determine both prognostics for individual patients and the global perspective for controlling the pandemics. So called "dark figure", that is, a part of population that has been infected but not registered by the health care system, make it difficult to estimate herd immunity and to predict pandemic trajectories. Here we present a follow up study of population screening for hidden herd immunity to SARS-CoV-2 in individuals who had never been positively diagnosed against SARS-CoV-2; the first screening was in May 2021, and the follow up in December 2021. We found that specific antibodies targeting SARS-CoV-2 detected in May as the "dark figure" cannot be considered important 7 months later due to their significant drop. On the other hand, among participants who at the first screening were negative for anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG, and who have never been diagnosed for SARS-CoV-2 infection nor vaccinated, 26% were found positive for anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG. This can be attributed to of the "dark figure" of the recent, fourth wave of the pandemic that occurred in Poland shortly before the study in December. Participants who were vaccinated between May and December demonstrated however higher levels of antibodies, than those who undergone mild or asymptomatic (thus unregistered) infection. Only 7% of these vaccinated participants demonstrated antibodies that resulted from infection (anti-NCP). The highest levels of protection were observed in the group that had been infected with SARS-CoV-2 before May 2021 and also fully vaccinated between May and December. These observations demonstrate that the hidden fraction of herd immunity is considerable, however its potential to suppress the pandemics is limited, highlighting the key role of vaccinations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Two Newly Isolated Enterobacter -Specific Bacteriophages: Biological Properties and Stability Studies.
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Cieślik, Martyna, Harhala, Marek, Orwat, Filip, Dąbrowska, Krystyna, Górski, Andrzej, and Jończyk-Matysiak, Ewa
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ENTEROBACTER cloacae , *BACTERIOPHAGES , *INTRAVESICAL administration , *URINARY tract infections , *ENTEROBACTER , *SILVER nanoparticles , *DRUG resistance in microorganisms - Abstract
In an era of antibiotic therapy crisis caused by spreading antimicrobial resistance, and when recurrent urinary tract infections constitute a serious social and medical problem, the isolation and complex characterization of phages with a potential therapeutic application represents a promising solution. It is an inevitable, and even a necessary direction in the development of current phage research. In this paper, we present two newly isolated myoviruses that show lytic activity against multidrug-resistant clinical isolates of Enterobacter spp. (E. cloacae, E. hormaechei, and E. kobei), the genomes of which belong to a poorly represented phage group. Both phages were classified as part of the Tevenvirinae subfamily (Entb_43 was recognized as Karamvirus and Entb_45 as Kanagawavirus). Phage lytic spectra ranging from 40 to 60% were obtained. The most effective phage-to-bacteria ratios (MOI = 0.01 and MOI = 0.001) for both the phage amplification and their lytic activity against planktonic bacteria were also estimated. Complete adsorption to host cells were obtained after about 20 min for Entb_43 and 10 min for Entb_45. The phage lysates retained their initial titers even during six months of storage at both −70 °C and 4 °C, whereas storage at 37 °C caused a complete loss in their activity. We showed that phages retained their activity after incubation with solutions of silver and copper nanoparticles, which may indicate possible synergistic antibacterial activity. Moreover, a significant reduction in phage titers was observed after incubation with a disinfectant containing octenidinum dihydrochloridum and phenoxyethanol, as well as with 70% ethanol. The observed maintenance of phage activity during incubation in a urine sample, along with other described properties, may suggest a therapeutic potential of phages at the infection site after intravesical administration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. Immunogenicity of Endolysin PlyC.
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Harhala, Marek Adam, Gembara, Katarzyna, Nelson, Daniel C., Miernikiewicz, Paulina, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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IMMUNE response ,IMMUNOGLOBULIN G ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,LABORATORY mice ,ENZYMES - Abstract
Endolysins are bacteriolytic enzymes derived from bacteriophages. They represent an alternative to antibiotics, since they are not susceptible to conventional antimicrobial resistance mechanisms. Since non-human proteins are efficient inducers of specific immune responses, including the IgG response or the development of an allergic response mediated by IgE, we evaluated the general immunogenicity of the highly active antibacterial enzyme, PlyC, in a human population and in a mouse model. The study includes the identification of molecular epitopes of PlyC. The overall assessment of potential hypersensitivity to this protein and PlyC-specific IgE testing was also conducted in mice. PlyC induced efficient IgG production in mice, and the molecular analysis revealed that PlyC-specific IgG interacted with four immunogenic regions identified within the PlyCA subunit. In humans, approximately 10% of the population demonstrated IgG reactivity to the PlyCB subunit only, which is attributed to cross-reactions since this was a naïve serum. Of note, in spite of being immunogenic, PlyC induced a normal immune response, without hypersensitivity, since both the animals challenged with PlyC and in the human population PlyC-specific IgE was not detected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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10. Hidden fraction of Polish population immune to SARS-CoV-2 in May 2021.
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Budziar, Wiktoria, Gembara, Katarzyna, Harhala, Marek, Szymczak, Aleksander, Jędruchniewicz, Natalia, Baniecki, Krzysztof, Pikies, Aleksandra, Nahorecki, Artur, Hoffmann, Agnieszka, Kardaś, Amelia, Szewczyk-Dąbrowska, Alina, Klimek, Tomasz, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Witkiewicz, Wojciech, Barczyk, Kamil, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,HERD immunity ,VIRUS diseases ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Population immunity (herd immunity) to SARS-CoV-2 derives from two sources: vaccinations or cases of infection with the virus. Infections can be diagnosed as COVID-19 and registered, or they can be asymptomatic, oligosymptomatic, or even full-blown but undiagnosed and unregistered when patients recovered at home. Estimation of population immunity to SARS-CoV-2 is difficult and remains a subject of speculations. Here we present a population screening for SARS-CoV-2 specific IgG and IgA antibodies in Polish citizens (N = 501) who had never been positively diagnosed with or vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2. Serum samples were collected in Wrocław (Lower Silesia) on 15th and 22nd May 2021. Sera from hospitalized COVID-19 patients (N = 22) or from vaccinated citizens (N = 14) served as positive controls. Sera were tested with Microblot-Array COVID-19 IgG and IgA (quantitative) that contain specific SARS-CoV-2 antigens: NCP, RBD, Spike S2, E, ACE2, PLPro protein, and antigens for exclusion cross-reactivity with other coronaviruses: MERS-CoV, SARS-CoV, HCoV 229E Np, HCoV NL63 Np. Within the investigated population of healthy individuals who had never been positively diagnosed with or vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2, we found that 35.5% (178 out of 501) were positive for SARS-CoV-2-specific IgG and 52.3% (262 out of 501) were positive for SARS-CoV-2-specific IgA; 21.2% of the investigated population developed virus-specific IgG or IgA while being asymptomatic. Anti-RBD IgG, which represents virus-neutralizing potential, was found in 25.6% of individuals (128 out of 501). These patients, though positive for anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies, cannot be identified in the public health system as convalescents due to undiagnosed infections, and they are considered unaffected by SARS-CoV-2. Their contribution to population immunity against COVID-19 should however be considered in predictions and modeling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Of note, the majority of the investigated population still lacked anti-RBD IgG protection (74.4%); thus vaccination against COVID-19 is still of the most importance for controlling the pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. DNA Dye Sytox Green in Detection of Bacteriolytic Activity: High Speed, Precision and Sensitivity Demonstrated With Endolysins.
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Harhala, Marek, Gembara, Katarzyna, Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Owczarek, Barbara, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Majewska, Joanna, Nelson, Daniel C., and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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LYSINS ,BACTERIAL cell walls ,DNA ,BACTERIAL population ,BACTERIAL growth ,ANTIBACTERIAL agents - Abstract
Introduction: Increasing number of deaths from multi-drug resistant bacterial infections has caused both the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to repeatedly call for development of new, non-traditional antibacterial treatments. Antimicrobial enzymes, including those derived from bacteriophages, known as endolysins or enzybiotics, are considered promising solutions among the emerging therapies. These naturally occurring proteins specifically destroy bacterial cell walls (peptidoglycan) and as such, are capable of killing several logs of bacteria within minutes. Some endolysins cause lysis of a wide range of susceptible bacteria, including both Gram-positive and Gram-negative organisms, whereas other endolysins are species- or even strain-specific. To make wide use of endolysins as antibacterial agents, some basic research issues remain to be clarified or addressed. Currently available methods for testing endolysin kinetics are indirect, require large numbers of bacteria, long incubation times and are affected by technical problems or limited reproducibility. Also, available methods are focused more on enzymatic activity rather than killing efficiency which is more relevant from a medical perspective. Results: We show a novel application of a DNA dye, SYTOX Green. It can be applied in comprehensive, real-time and rapid measurement of killing efficiency, lytic activity, and susceptibility of a bacterial population to lytic enzymes. Use of DNA dyes shows improved reaction times, higher sensitivity in low concentrations of bacteria, and independence of bacterial growth. Our data show high precision in lytic activity and enzyme efficiency measurements. This solution opens the way to the development of new, high throughput, precise measurements and tests in variety of conditions, thus unlocking new possibilities in development of novel antimicrobials and analysis of bacterial samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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12. Immune Response to Therapeutic Staphylococcal Bacteriophages in Mammals: Kinetics of Induction, Immunogenic Structural Proteins, Natural and Induced Antibodies.
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Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Majewska, Joanna, Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Międzybrodzki, Ryszard, Nowak, Sylwia, Harhala, Marek, Lecion, Dorota, Kęska, Weronika, Owczarek, Barbara, Ciekot, Jarosław, Drab, Marek, Kędzierski, Paweł, Mazurkiewicz-Kania, Marta, Górski, Andrzej, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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CYTOSKELETAL proteins ,IMMUNE response ,BACTERIOPHAGE T4 ,VIRAL proteins ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS - Abstract
Bacteriophages are able to affect the human immune system. Phage-specific antibodies are considered as major factors shaping phage pharmacokinetics and bioavailability. So far, general knowledge of phage antigenicity nevertheless remains extremely limited. Here we present comparative studies of immunogenicity in two therapeutic bacteriophages, A3R and 676Z, active against Staphylococcus aureus , routinely applied in patients at the Phage Therapy Unit, Poland. Comparison of the overall ability of whole phages to induce specific antibodies in a murine model revealed typical kinetics of IgM and IgG induction by these two phages. In further studies we identified the location of four phage proteins in the virions, with the focus on the external capsid head (Mcp) or tail sheath (TmpH) or an unidentified precise location (ORF059 and ORF096), and we confirmed their role as structural proteins of these viruses. Next, we compared the immune response elicited by these proteins after phage administration in mice. Similar to that in T4 phage, Mcp was the major element of the capsid that induced specific antibodies. Studies of protein-specific sera revealed that antibodies specific to ORF096 were able to neutralize antibacterial activity of the phages. In humans (population level), none of the studied proteins plays a particular role in the induction of specific antibodies; thus none potentially affects in a particular way the effectiveness of A3R and 676Z. Also in patients subjected to phage therapy, we did not observe increased specific immune responses to the investigated proteins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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13. Induction of Phage-Specific Antibodies by Two Therapeutic Staphylococcal Bacteriophages Administered per os.
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Majewska, Joanna, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Lahutta, Karolina, Lecion, Dorota, Szymczak, Aleksander, Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Drapała, Jarosław, Harhala, Marek, Marek-Bukowiec, Karolina, Jędruchniewicz, Natalia, Owczarek, Barbara, Górski, Andrzej, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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BACTERIOPHAGES ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,GASTROINTESTINAL system ,NUCLEOTIDE sequencing ,DRINKING water - Abstract
In therapeutic phage applications oral administration is a common and well-accepted delivery route. Phages applied per os may elicit a specific humoral response, which may in turn affect phage activity. We present specific anti-phage antibody induction in mice receiving therapeutic staphylococcal bacteriophage A3R or 676Z in drinking water. The schedule comprised: (1) primary exposure to phages for 100 days, followed by (2) diet without phage for 120 days, and (3) secondary exposure to the same phage for 44 days. Both phages induced specific antibodies in blood (IgM, IgG, IgA), even though poor to ineffective translocation of the phages to blood was observed. IgM reached a maximum on day 22, IgG increased from day 22 until the end of the experiment. Specific IgA in the blood and in the gut were induced simultaneously within about 2 months; the IgA level gradually decreased when phage was removed from the diet. Importantly, phage-specific IgA was the limiting factor for phage activity in the gastrointestinal tract. Multicopy proteins (major capsid protein and tail morphogenetic protein H) contributed significantly to phage immunogenicity (IgG), while the baseplate protein gpORF096 did not induce a significant response. Microbiome composition assessment by next-generation sequencing (NGS) revealed that no important changes correlated with phage treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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14. Bacteriophages engineered to display foreign peptides may become short‐circulating phages.
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Hodyra‐Stefaniak, Katarzyna, Lahutta, Karolina, Majewska, Joanna, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Lecion, Dorota, Harhala, Marek, Kęska, Weronika, Owczarek, Barbara, Jończyk‐Matysiak, Ewa, Kłopot, Anna, Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Kula, Dominika, Górski, Andrzej, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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BACTERIOPHAGES ,BACTERIOPHAGE T4 ,BLOOD circulation ,PEPTIDES ,MAGNITUDE (Mathematics) ,IMMUNE system - Abstract
Summary: Bacteriophages draw scientific attention in medicine and biotechnology, including phage engineering, widely used to shape biological properties of bacteriophages. We developed engineered T4‐derived bacteriophages presenting seven types of tissue‐homing peptides. We evaluated phage accumulation in targeted tissues, spleen, liver and phage circulation in blood (in mice). Contrary to expectations, accumulation of engineered bacteriophages in targeted organs was not observed, but instead, three engineered phages achieved tissue titres up to 2 orders of magnitude lower than unmodified T4. This correlated with impaired survival of these phages in the circulation. Thus, engineering of T4 phage resulted in the short‐circulating phage phenotype. We found that the complement system inactivated engineered phages significantly more strongly than unmodified T4, while no significant differences in phages' susceptibility to phagocytosis or immunogenicity were found. The short‐circulating phage phenotype of the engineered phages suggests that natural phages, at least those propagating on commensal bacteria of animals and humans, are naturally optimized to escape rapid neutralization by the immune system. In this way, phages remain active for longer when inside mammalian bodies, thus increasing their chance of propagating on commensal bacteria. The effect of phage engineering on phage pharmacokinetics should be considered in phage design for medical purposes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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15. Two novel temperate bacteriophages infecting Streptococcus pyogenes: Their genomes, morphology and stability.
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Harhala, Marek, Barylski, Jakub, Humińska-Lisowska, Kinga, Lecion, Dorota, Wojciechowicz, Jacek, Lahutta, Karolina, Kuś, Marta, Kropinski, Andrew M., Nowak, Sylwia, Nowicki, Grzegorz, Hodyra-Stefaniak, Katarzyna, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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BACTERIOPHAGES , *STREPTOCOCCUS pyogenes , *BACTERIAL genomes , *BACTERIA morphology , *NUCLEOTIDE sequence - Abstract
Only 3% of phage genomes in NCBI nucleotide database represent phages that are active against Streptococcus sp. With the aim to increase general awareness of phage diversity, we isolated two bacteriophages, Str01 and Str03, active against health-threatening Group A Streptococcus (GAS). Both phages are members of the Siphoviridae, but their analysis revealed that Str01 and Str03 do not belong to any known genus. We identified their structural proteins based on LC–ESI29 MS/MS and list their basic thermal stability and physico-chemical features including optimum pH. Annotated genomic sequences of the phages are deposited in GenBank (NCBI accession numbers KY349816 and KY363359, respectively). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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16. Real-Time qPCR as a Method for Detection of Antibody-Neutralized Phage Particles.
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Kłopot, Anna, Zakrzewska, Adriana, Lecion, Dorota, Majewska, Joanna M., Harhala, Marek A., Lahutta, Karolina, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Kłak, Łukasz Łaczmański Marlena, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
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BACTERIOPHAGES ,PLAQUE assay technique ,POLYMERASE chain reaction - Abstract
The most common method for phage quantitation is the plaque assay, which relies on phage ability to infect bacteria. However, non-infective phage particles may preserve other biological properties; specifically, they may enter interactions with the immune system of animals and humans. Here, we demonstrate real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) detection of bacteriophages as an alternative to the plaque assay. The closely related staphylococcal bacteriophages A3R and 676Z and the coliphage T4 were used as model phages. They were tested in vivo in mice, ex vivo in human sera, and on plastic surfaces designed for ELISAs. T4 phage was injected intravenously into pre-immunized mice. The phage was completely neutralized by specific antibodies within 5 h (0 pfu/ml of serum, as determined by the plaque assay), but it was still detected by qPCR in the amount of approximately 10
7 pfu/ml of serum. This demonstrates a substantial timelapse between "microbiological disappearance" and true clearance of phage particles from the circulation. In human sera ex vivo, qPCR was also able to detect neutralized phage particles that were not detected by the standard plaque assay. The investigated bacteriophages differed considerably in their ability to immobilize on plastic surfaces: this difference was greater than one order of magnitude, as shown by qPCR of phage recovered from plastic plates. The ELISA did not detect differences in phage binding to plates. Major limitations of qPCR are possible inhibitors of the PCR reaction or free phage DNA, which need to be considered in procedures of phage sample preparation for qPCR testing. We propose that phage pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies should not rely merely on detection of antibacterial activity of a phage. Real-time qPCR can be an alternative for phage detection, especially in immunological studies of bacteriophages. It can also be useful for studies of phage-based drug nanocarriers or biosensors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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17. T4 Phage Tail Adhesin Gp12 Counteracts LPS-Induced Inflammation In Vivo.
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Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Kłopot, Anna, Soluch, Ryszard, Szkuta, Piotr, Kęska, Weronika, Hodyra-Stefaniak, Katarzyna, Konopka, Agnieszka, Nowak, Marcin, Lecion, Dorota, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Majewska, Joanna, Harhala, Marek, Górski, Andrzej, Dąbrowska, Krystyna, Von Wright, Atte, and Hooton, Steven P. T.
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BACTERIOPHAGES ,INFLAMMATION ,LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDES - Abstract
Bacteriophages that infect Gram-negative bacteria often bind to the bacterial surface by interaction of specific proteins with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Short tail fiber proteins (tail adhesin, gp12) mediate adsorption of T4-like bacteriophages to Escherichia coli, binding surface proteins or LPS. Produced as a recombinant protein, gp12 retains its ability to bind LPS. Since LPS is able to exert a major impact on the immune response in animals and in humans, we have tested LPS-binding phage protein gp12 as a potential modulator of the LPS-induced immune response. We have produced tail adhesin gp12 in a bacterial expression system and confirmed its ability to form trimers and to bind LPS in vitro by dynamic light scattering. This product had no negative effect on mammalian cell proliferation in vitro. Further, no harmful effects of this protein were observed in mice. Thus, gp12 was used in combination with LPS in a murine model, and it decreased the inflammatory response to LPS in vivo, as assessed by serum levels of cytokines IL- 1 alpha and IL-6 and by histopathological analysis of spleen, liver, kidney and lungs. Thus, in future studies gp12 may be considered as a potential tool for modulating and specifically for counteracting LPS-related physiological effects in vivo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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18. Mammalian Host-Versus-Phage immune response determines phage fate in vivo.
- Author
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Hodyra-Stefaniak, Katarzyna, Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Drapała, Jarosław, Drab, Marek, Jończyk-Matysiak, Ewa, Lecion, Dorota, Kazmierczak, Zuźanna, Beta, Weronika, Majewska, Joanna, Harhala, Marek, Bubak, Barbara, Kłopot, Anna, Górski, Andrzej, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
- Subjects
DRUG resistance in bacteria ,ALTERNATIVE treatment for bacterial diseases ,IMMUNE response ,BACTERIOPHAGES ,ANTIBACTERIAL agents ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS - Abstract
Emerging bacterial antibiotic resistance draws attention to bacteriophages as a therapeutic alternative to treat bacterial infection. Examples of phage that combat bacteria abound. However, despite careful testing of antibacterial activity in vitro, failures nevertheless commonly occur. We investigated immunological response of phage antibacterial potency in vivo. Anti-phage activity of phagocytes, antibodies, and serum complement were identified by direct testing and by high-resolution fluorescent microscopy. We accommodated the experimental data into a mathematical model. We propose a universal schema of innate and adaptive immunity impact on phage pharmacokinetics, based on the results of our numerical simulations. We found that the mammalian-host response to infecting bacteria causes the concomitant removal of phage from the system. We propose the notion that this effect as an indirect pathway of phage inhibition by bacteria with significant relevance for the clinical outcome of phage therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
19. Oral Application of T4 Phage Induces Weak Antibody Production in the Gut and in the Blood.
- Author
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Majewska, Joanna, Beta, Weronika, Lecion, Dorota, Hodyra-Stefaniak, Katarzyna, Kłopot, Anna, Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Piotrowicz, Agnieszka, Ciekot, Jarosław, Owczarek, Barbara, Kopciuch, Agnieszka, Wojtyna, Karolina, Harhala, Marek, Mąkosa, Mateusz, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
- Subjects
ANTIBODY formation ,BACTERIOPHAGE T4 ,EBOLA virus ,CAPSIDS ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,ANTIGENS - Abstract
A specific humoral response to bacteriophages may follow phage application for medical purposes, and it may further determine the success or failure of the approach itself. We present a long-term study of antibody induction in mice by T4 phage applied per os: 100 days of phage treatment followed by 112 days without the phage, and subsequent second application of phage up to day 240. Serum and gut antibodies (IgM, IgG, secretory IgA) were analyzed in relation to microbiological status of the animals. T4 phage applied orally induced anti-phage antibodies when the exposure was long enough (IgG day 36, IgA day 79); the effect was related to high dosage. Termination of phage treatment resulted in a decrease of IgA again to insignificant levels. Second administration of phage induces secretory IgA sooner than that induced by the first administrations. Increased IgA level antagonized gut transit of active phage. Phage resistant E. coli dominated gut flora very late, on day 92. Thus, the immunological response emerges as a major factor determining phage survival in the gut. Phage proteins Hoc and gp12 were identified as highly immunogenic. A low response to exemplary foreign antigens (from Ebola virus) presented on Hoc was observed, which suggests that phage platforms can be used in oral vaccine design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Molecular imaging of T4 phage in mammalian tissues and cells.
- Author
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Kaźmierczak, Zuzanna, Piotrowicz, Agnieszka, Owczarek, Barbara, Hodyra, Katarzyna, Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Lecion, Dorota, Harhala, Marek, Górski, Andrzej, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
- Subjects
BACTERIOPHAGE T4 ,PROTEIN research ,GREEN fluorescent protein ,LYMPH nodes ,LIFE sciences ,BIOTECHNOLOGY - Abstract
Advances in phage therapy encourage scientific interest in interactions of phages with human and animal organisms. This has created a need for developing tools that facilitate studies of phage circulation and deposition in tissues and cells. Here we propose a new green fluorescent protein (GFP)-based method for T4 phage molecular imaging in living systems. The method employs decoration of a phage capsid with GFP fused to the N-terminus of Hoc protein by in vivo phage display. Fluorescent phages were positively assessed as regards their applicability for detection inside living mammalian cells (by phagocytosis) and tissues (filtering and retention by lymph nodes and spleen). Molecular imaging provides innovative techniques that have brought substantial progress in life sciences. We propose it as a useful tool for studies of phage biology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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21. A novel approach for separating bacteriophages from other bacteriophages using affinity chromatography and phage display.
- Author
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Ceglarek, Izabela, Piotrowicz, Agnieszka, Lecion, Dorota, Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Owczarek, Barbara, Hodyra, Katarzyna, Harhala, Marek, Górski, Andrzej, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
- Subjects
BACTERIOPHAGES ,AFFINITY chromatography ,BACTERIAL cells ,GENE expression ,BIOTECHNOLOGY - Abstract
Practical applications of bacteriophages in medicine and biotechnology induce a great need for technologies of phage purification. None of the popular methods offer solutions for separation of a phage from another similar phage. We used affinity chromatography combined with competitive phage display (i) to purify T4 bacteriophage from bacterial debris and (ii) to separate T4 from other contaminating bacteriophages. In 'competitive phage display' bacterial cells produced both wild types of the proteins (expression from the phage genome) and the protein fusions with affinity tags (expression from the expression vectors). Fusion proteins were competitively incorporated into the phage capsid. It allowed effective separation of T4 from a contaminating phage on standard affinity resins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Safety Studies of Pneumococcal Endolysins Cpl-1 and Pal.
- Author
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Harhala, Marek, Nelson, Daniel C., Miernikiewicz, Paulina, Heselpoth, Ryan D., Brzezicka, Beata, Majewska, Joanna, Linden, Sara B., Shang, Xiaoran, Szymczak, Aleksander, Lecion, Dorota, Marek-Bukowiec, Karolina, Kłak, Marlena, Wojciechowicz, Bartosz, Lahutta, Karolina, Konieczny, Andrzej, and Dąbrowska, Krystyna
- Subjects
- *
BACTERIOPHAGES , *ANTI-infective agents , *VIRUSES , *CYTOKINES , *CELLULAR immunity - Abstract
Bacteriophage-derived endolysins have gained increasing attention as potent antimicrobial agents and numerous publications document the in vivo efficacy of these enzymes in various rodent models. However, little has been documented about their safety and toxicity profiles. Here, we present preclinical safety and toxicity data for two pneumococcal endolysins, Pal and Cpl-1. Microarray, and gene profiling was performed on human macrophages and pharyngeal cells exposed to 0.5 µM of each endolysin for six hours and no change in gene expression was noted. Likewise, in mice injected with 15 mg/kg of each endolysin, no physical or behavioral changes were noted, pro-inflammatory cytokine levels remained constant, and there were no significant changes in the fecal microbiome. Neither endolysin caused complement activation via the classic pathway, the alternative pathway, or the mannose-binding lectin pathway. In cellular response assays, IgG levels in mice exposed to Pal or Cpl-1 gradually increased for the first 30 days post exposure, but IgE levels never rose above baseline, suggesting that hypersensitivity or allergic reaction is unlikely. Collectively, the safety and toxicity profiles of Pal and Cpl-1 support further preclinical studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Immunogenic epitope scanning in bacteriolytic enzymes Pal and Cpl-1 and engineering Pal to escape antibody responses.
- Author
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Harhala MA, Gembara K, Rybicka I, Kaźmierczak ZM, Miernikiewicz P, Majewska JM, Budziar W, Nasulewicz-Goldeman A, Nelson DC, Owczarek B, and Dąbrowska K
- Subjects
- Epitopes, Proteins, Amino Acids, Antibody Formation, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology
- Abstract
Bacteriolytic enzymes are promising antibacterial agents, but they can cause a typical immune response in vivo . In this study, we used a targeted modification method for two antibacterial endolysins, Pal and Cpl-1. We identified the key immunogenic amino acids, and designed and tested new, bacteriolytic variants with altered immunogenicity. One new variant of Pal (257-259 MKS → TFG) demonstrated decreased immunogenicity while a similar mutant (257-259 MKS → TFK) demonstrated increased immunogenicity. A third variant (280-282 DKP → GGA) demonstrated significantly increased antibacterial activity and it was not cross-neutralized by antibodies induced by the wild-type enzyme. We propose this variant as a new engineered endolysin with increased antibacterial activity that is capable of escaping cross-neutralization by antibodies induced by wild-type Pal. We show that efficient antibacterial enzymes that avoid cross-neutralization by IgG can be developed by epitope scanning, in silico design, and substitutions of identified key amino acids with a high rate of success. Importantly, this universal approach can be applied to many proteins beyond endolysins and has the potential for design of numerous biological drugs., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Harhala, Gembara, Rybicka, Kaźmierczak, Miernikiewicz, Majewska, Budziar, Nasulewicz-Goldeman, Nelson, Owczarek and Dąbrowska.)
- Published
- 2023
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24. Natural and Induced Antibodies Against Phages in Humans: Induction Kinetics and Immunogenicity for Structural Proteins of PB1-Related Phages.
- Author
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Hodyra-Stefaniak K, Kaźmierczak Z, Majewska J, Sillankorva S, Miernikiewicz P, Międzybrodzki R, Górski A, Azeredo J, Lavigne R, Lecion D, Nowak S, Harhala M, Waśko P, Owczarek B, Gembara K, and Dąbrowska K
- Abstract
Background: Bacteriophages may induce specific antibodies after natural exposure to phages or after phage therapy. As such, phage-specific antibodies might impact phage bioavailability in vivo , although limited non-neutralizing or insignificant effects have also been reported. Materials and Methods: Here, we report antibody induction against PB1-related phages ( Pseudomonas viruses LMA2, F8, DP1) in mice over an 80-day period, for a healthy population of humans, and in patients undergoing phage therapy (oral and/or topical treatment). Results: All phages effectively induced specific immunoglobulin M and immunoglobulin G in mice. Phage-specific antibodies were observed in humans, whereas recombinant virion proteins (PB1 gp22, gp29) did not induce phage-neutralizing antibodies, either in mice or in humans. The healthy human population was differentiated for frequency of phage-neutralizing antibodies. Conclusions: These data can hold key considerations for phage therapy cocktail design, as highly similar phages can still be highly complementary in cases where specific immune response hinders therapeutic use of phages., Competing Interests: No other competing financial interests exist., (Copyright 2020, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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