| Literature DB >> 23285164 |
Maia Merabishvili1, Daniel De Vos, Gilbert Verbeken, Andrew M Kropinski, Dieter Vandenheuvel, Rob Lavigne, Pierre Wattiau, Jan Mast, Catherine Ragimbeau, Joel Mossong, Jacques Scheres, Nina Chanishvili, Mario Vaneechoutte, Jean-Paul Pirnay.
Abstract
In 2011, a novel strain of O104:H4 Escherichia coli caused a serious outbreak of foodborne hemolytic uremic syndrome and bloody diarrhea in Germany. Antibiotics were of questionable use and 54 deaths occurred. Candidate therapeutic bacteriophages that efficiently lyse the E. coli O104:H4 outbreak strain could be selected rather easily from a phage bank or isolated from the environment. It is argued that phage therapy should be more considered as a potential armament against the growing threat of (resistant) bacterial infections.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23285164 PMCID: PMC3528706 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0052709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Susceptibility of ten pathogenic E. coli serotypes to infection with phage GEC-3S.
| Serotype | ||||||||||
| O26:K60 | O55:K59 | O86:K61 | O104:H4 | O111:K58 | O111:K60 | O125:K70 | O128:K67 | O142:K86 | O157:H7 | |
|
| − | − | − | cl | − | − | cl | − | – | – |
−, no lysis; cl, confluent lysis.
Figure 1Transmission electron micrographs of myovirus GEC-3S.
Phage particles were analyzed by transmission electron microscopy as described by Imberechts et al. [27]. The head is somewhat elongated, appears hexagonal in outline and has a mean diameter of 102 nm (SEM = 3 nm). The head is separated from the tail by a neck. The tail is a rigid, contractile tube with a mean length of 109 nm (SEM = 1 nm). It appears cross-banded, suggesting helical symmetry. The tail ends in short and long fibers. The latter do not show up very well on this micrograph.
Figure 2Pairwise DNA homology of GEC-3S and phi1, GEC-3S and RB49, GEC-3S and JSE, compared using a sliding window of 50 bp.
ORFs of phage GEC-3S not presented in any other representative of the RB49 group.
| N | Amino acid length | E value | Putative functions/Known Homologs |
| ORF 63 | 251 | 5×10−16 | putative homing endonuclease RB16 6 (Enterobacteria phage RB16) |
| ORF 137 | 246 | 1×10−9 | putative H-N-H-endonuclease P-TflX (Enterobacteria phage T5) |
| ORF 163 | 32 | – | ORFan |
| ORF 171 | 44 | – | ORFan |
| ORF 265 | 80 | – | ORFan |
| ORF 266 | 66 | – | ORFan |
Putative functions and known homologs of ORFs were identified using BlastP against the non-redundant database.