Publication | Closed Access
Engineered Phagemids for Nonlytic, Targeted Antibacterial Therapies
104
Citations
21
References
2015
Year
Antimicrobial Drug DiscoveryEngineeringAntibioticsPeptide EngineeringProtein ToxinsBacterial PhagemidsBacteriophageBiotechnologySynthetic BiologyProtein EngineeringAntibacterial AgentMicrobiologyProkaryotic VirusPhage BiologyMedicineAntimicrobial ResistanceEngineered Phagemids
The increasing incidence of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections is creating a global public health threat. Because conventional antibiotic drug discovery has failed to keep pace with the rise of resistance, a growing need exists to develop novel antibacterial methodologies. Replication-competent bacteriophages have been utilized in a limited fashion to treat bacterial infections. However, this approach can result in the release of harmful endotoxins, leading to untoward side effects. Here, we engineer bacterial phagemids to express antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) and protein toxins that disrupt intracellular processes, leading to rapid, nonlytic bacterial death. We show that this approach is highly modular, enabling one to readily alter the number and type of AMPs and toxins encoded by the phagemids. Furthermore, we demonstrate the effectiveness of engineered phagemids in an in vivo murine peritonitis infection model. This work shows that targeted, engineered phagemid therapy can serve as a viable, nonantibiotic means to treat bacterial infections, while avoiding the health issues inherent to lytic and replicative bacteriophage use.
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