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Antibacterial Potential of Non-Tailed Icosahedral Phages Alone and in Combination with Antibiotics.

Authors :
Vukovic, Darija
Gostimirovic, Sonja
Cvetanovic, Jelena
Gavric, Damir
Aleksic Sabo, Verica
Todorovic, Dalibor
Medic, Deana
Knezevic, Petar
Source :
Current Microbiology. Jul2024, Vol. 81 Issue 7, p1-11. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Non-tailed icosahedral phages belonging to families Fiersviridae (phages MS2 and Qbeta), Tectiviridae (PRD1) and Microviridae (phiX174) have not been considered in detail so far as potential antibacterial agents. The aim of the study was to examine various aspects of the applicability of these phages as antibacterial agents. Antibacterial potential of four phages was investigated via bacterial growth and biofilm formation inhibition, lytic spectra determination, and phage safety examination. The phage phiX174 was combined with different classes of antibiotics to evaluate potential synergistic interactions. In addition, the incidence of phiX174-insensitive mutants was analyzed. The results showed that only phiX174 out of four phages tested against their corresponding hosts inhibited bacterial growth for > 90% at different multiplicity of infection and that only this phage considerably prevented biofilm formation. Although all phages show the absence of potentially undesirable genes, they also have extremely narrow lytic spectra. The synergism was determined between phage phiX174 and ceftazidime, ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin, macrolides, and chloramphenicol. It was shown that the simultaneous application of agents is more effective than successive treatment, where one agent is applied first. The analysis of the appearance of phiX174 bacteriophage-insensitive mutants showed that mutations occur with a frequency of 10–3. The examined non-tailed phages have a limited potential for use as antibacterial agents, primarily due to a very narrow lytic spectrum and the high frequency of resistant mutants appearance, but Microviridae can be considered in the future as biocontrol agents against susceptible strains of E. coli in combinations with conventional antimicrobial agents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03438651
Volume :
81
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Current Microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177767110
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00284-024-03705-w