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Book ChapterDOI

Bacteriophage host range and bacterial resistance.

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TLDR
How phage host range can (and should) be defined plus claims of host ranges spanning multiple bacterial genera are summarized plus bacterial mechanisms of phage resistance are reviewed.
Abstract
Host range describes the breadth of organisms a parasite is capable of infecting, with limits on host range stemming from parasite, host, or environmental characteristics. Parasites can adapt to overcome host or environmental limitations, while hosts can adapt to control the negative impact of parasites. We consider these adaptations as they occur among bacteriophages (phages) and their bacterial hosts, since they are significant to phage use as antibacterials (phage therapy) or to protection of industrial ferments from phage attack. Initially, we address how phage host range can (and should) be defined plus summarize claims of host ranges spanning multiple bacterial genera. Subsequently, we review bacterial mechanisms of phage resistance. These include adsorption resistance, which results in reduced interaction between phage and bacterium; what we describe as "restriction," where bacteria live but phages die; and abortive infections, where both phage and bacterium die. Adsorption resistance includes loss of phage receptor molecules on hosts as well as physical barriers hiding receptor molecules (e.g., capsules). Restriction mechanisms include phage-genome uptake blocks, superinfection immunity, restriction modification, and CRISPR, all of which function postphage adsorption but prior to terminal phage takeover of host metabolism. Standard laboratory selection methods, involving exposure of planktonic bacteria to high phage densities, tend to directly select for these prehost-takeover resistance mechanisms. Alternatively, resistance mechanisms that do not prevent bacterium death are less readily artificially selected. Contrasting especially bacteria mutation to adsorption resistance, these latter mechanisms likely are an underappreciated avenue of bacterial resistance to phage attack.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pros and cons of phage therapy.

TL;DR: This commentary considers aspects of phage therapy that can contribute to its safety, economics, or convenience, but in ways that are perhaps less essential to the phage potential to combat bacteria.
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Phage cocktails and the future of phage therapy

TL;DR: This review considers phage therapy that can be used for treating bacterial infections in humans, domestic animals and even biocontrol in foods, and explores a regulatory framework for such an approach based on an influenza vaccine model.
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Phage Therapy in Clinical Practice: Treatment of Human Infections

TL;DR: This review aims to provide an overview of the potential of phage therapy as a means of treating or preventing human diseases and to explore the phage Therapy state of the art as currently practiced by physicians in various pockets ofphage therapy activity around the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacteria–phage coevolution as a driver of ecological and evolutionary processes in microbial communities

TL;DR: This review sums up the current understanding of bacteria–phage coevolution both in the laboratory and in nature, and discusses recent findings on both thecoevolutionary process itself and the impact of coev evolution on bacterial phenotype, diversity and interactions with other species (particularly their eukaryotic hosts).
Journal ArticleDOI

Host receptors for bacteriophage adsorption

TL;DR: An open-access resource, the Phage Receptor Database (PhReD), is established to serve as a repository for information on known and newly identified phage receptors involved in recognition and adsorption and their interactions during attachment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nucleotide sequence of the iap gene, responsible for alkaline phosphatase isozyme conversion in Escherichia coli, and identification of the gene product.

TL;DR: Neither the isozyme-converting activity nor labeled Iap proteins were detected in the osmotic-shock fluid of cells carrying a multicopy iap plasmid, and the Iap protein seems to be associated with the membrane.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology of prokaryotic viruses

TL;DR: Virus-induced mortality of prokaryotes varies strongly on a temporal and spatial scale and shows that phages can be important predators of bacterioplankton, which can strongly influence microbial food web processes and biogeochemical cycles.
Book

Encyclopedia of virology

TL;DR: The Encyclopedia of Virology focuses on the effects of viruses on the immune system, the role of viruses in disease, oncology, gene therapy, and evolution, plus a wide range of related topics.
Journal ArticleDOI

CRISPR--a widespread system that provides acquired resistance against phages in bacteria and archaea.

TL;DR: The structure and function of this newly recognized antiviral mechanism, together with a group of associated proteins, confer resistance to phages, possibly by an RNA-interference-like mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genomic islands: tools of bacterial horizontal gene transfer and evolution.

TL;DR: Genomic islands play a crucial role in the evolution of a broad spectrum of bacteria as they are involved in the dissemination of variable genes, including antibiotic resistance and virulence genes leading to generation of hospital ‘superbugs’, as well as catabolic genes lead to formation of new metabolic pathways.
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