4.6 Article

Indirect Selection against Antibiotic Resistance via Specialized Plasmid-Dependent Bacteriophages

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9020280

Keywords

antibiotic resistance; conjugative plasmids; plasmid-dependent; male-specific; pilus-binding; bacteriophages

Categories

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [336518, 297049, 322204]
  2. Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation
  3. Academy of Finland (AKA) [336518, 322204, 297049, 297049, 322204] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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The utilization of plasmid-dependent bacteriophages has been found to be beneficial in controlling multi-drug resistant bacterial infections by causing bacteria to lose plasmids or making plasmids mutate so they cannot be transferred between pathogens. This approach has been recognized as a more acceptable choice that can act across different pathogens.
Antibiotic resistance genes of important Gram-negative bacterial pathogens are residing in mobile genetic elements such as conjugative plasmids. These elements rapidly disperse between cells when antibiotics are present and hence our continuous use of antimicrobials selects for elements that often harbor multiple resistance genes. Plasmid-dependent (or male-specific or, in some cases, pilus-dependent) bacteriophages are bacterial viruses that infect specifically bacteria that carry certain plasmids. The introduction of these specialized phages into a plasmid-abundant bacterial community has many beneficial effects from an anthropocentric viewpoint: the majority of the plasmids are lost while the remaining plasmids acquire mutations that make them untransferable between pathogens. Recently, bacteriophage-based therapies have become a more acceptable choice to treat multi-resistant bacterial infections. Accordingly, there is a possibility to utilize these specialized phages, which are not dependent on any particular pathogenic species or strain but rather on the resistance-providing elements, in order to improve or enlengthen the lifespan of conventional antibiotic approaches. Here, we take a snapshot of the current knowledge of plasmid-dependent bacteriophages.

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