Author:
Favor Andrew H.,Llanos Carlos D.,Youngblut Matthew D.,Bardales Jorge A.
Abstract
AbstractThe emergence of antibiotic resistance has raised serious concerns within scientific and medical communities, and has underlined the importance of developing new antimicrobial agents to combat such infections. Bacteriophages, naturally occurring bacterial viruses, have long been characterized as promising antibiotic alternatives. Although bacteriophages hold great promise as medical tools, clinical applications have been limited by certain characteristics of phage biology, with structural fragility under the high temperatures and acidic environments of therapeutic applications significantly limiting therapeutic effectiveness. This study presents and evaluates the efficacy of a new accelerated evolution platform, chemically accelerated viral evolution (CAVE), which provides an effective and robust method for the rapid enhancement of desired bacteriophage characteristics. Here, our initial use of this methodology demonstrates its ability to confer significant improvements in phage thermal stability. Analysis of the mutation patterns that arise through CAVE iterations elucidates the manner in which specific genetic modifications bring forth desired changes in functionality, thereby providing a roadmap for bacteriophage engineering.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
36 articles.
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