| Literature DB >> 29442169 |
Barbara Maciejewska1, Tomasz Olszak1, Zuzanna Drulis-Kawa2.
Abstract
Bacteriophages (phages) are viruses that infect bacteria. The "predator-prey" interactions are recognized as a potentially effective way to treat infections. Phages, as well as phage-derived proteins, especially enzymes, are intensively studied to become future alternative or supportive antibacterials used alone or in combination with standard antibiotic regimens treatment. There are many publications presenting phage therapy aspects, and some papers focused separately on the application of phage-derived enzymes. In this review, we discuss advantages and limitations of both agents concerning their specificity, mode of action, structural issues, resistance development, pharmacokinetics, product preparation, and interactions with the immune system. Finally, we describe the current regulations for phage-based product application.Entities:
Keywords: Phage enzymes application in treatment; Phage lysins; Phage therapy; Phage-borne polysaccharide depolymerases
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29442169 PMCID: PMC5847195 DOI: 10.1007/s00253-018-8811-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 0175-7598 Impact factor: 4.813
Fig. 1The possible consequences of phage infection: a bacterial host lysis and release of phage progeny; b lack of virus propagation conditioned by bacterial resistance to phage infection; c lack of host lysis and phage DNA maintenance as an episome (pseudolysogeny, lytic and temperate phages); d lack of host lysis and phage DNA integration into bacterial genome (lysogeny, temperate phages)
Fig. 2The main characteristics of phage-based products application. The application of lytic phage preparation may result in both bacterial host lysis (the effect observed even in minutes) or lack of lysis (transition into a pseudolysogeny state). The application of lysin-based product leads to the lysis of targeted host (the effect observed even in seconds). The application of depolymerase-based product leads to degradation of capsule (CPS), exopolysaccharides (EPS), or lipopolysaccharides (LPS) decreasing bacterial virulence followed by enhancement of immune system clearance (the effect observed even in minutes)
Major features of lytic bacteriophages and phage enzymes as antimicrobials
| Selected features | Phage | Phage enzymes |
|---|---|---|
| Specificity and host range | Propagation on bacterial host (predator–prey relation); narrow host range, very specific mostly on one bacterial species | Narrow or broad depending on the chemical composition commonness of targeted macromolecule |
| Mode of action | Bacteriolytic; phage titer-dependent killing; virulence efficacy: multiplicity of infection (MOI), burst size, propagation rate; effective on growing cells | Bacteriolytic (lysins) or antivirulent (depolymerases); concentration-dependent activity; minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC); effective on growing and non-growing cells |
| Biofilm eradication | Relatively effective; phage penetration within the biofilm matrix enhanced by virion-associated depolymerases | Biofilm matrix degradation by depolymerases and eradication by lysins |
| Resistance development | Relatively fast by mutation and selection; receptor modification; passive adaptation; restriction-modification system; CRISPR-Cas; bacteriophage exclusion; superinfection exclusion; abortive infection; pseudolysogeny | Relatively fast change of depolymerase targets (phage receptor modification); low level of induced resistance for lysins |
| Product modification including genetically modified products | Fast and easy isolation of new phages from environmental source; isolation of naturally evolving phages; engineered phages (genetically modified microorganism not approved for therapy) | In silico development by protein data bases exploration; analysis of annotated phage genomes; engineered proteins (approved for therapy) |
| Influence on normal flora | Load reduction of targeted strain; regulation of microbiome composition | Load reduction/virulence decrease of targeted strain; regulation of microbiome composition |
| Impact on immune system | Reticuloendothelial system (RES) clearance and immune cellular defense mechanisms; immunogenic (induction of antibodies production) | Immunogenic (induction of antibodies production) |
| Safety | Possible endotoxin (LPS) and other toxins release during cell lysis | Possible endotoxin (LPS) and other toxins release during cell lysis |
| Product preparation (purity, concentration, stability at different temperatures, and pH) | Different stability properties dependent on structural protein composition; limitation in densification and purification; large-scale methods need to be adopted | Relatively stable, especially lysins; recombinant protein expression well developed and large-scale methods adopted |
| Formulations and delivery route | Liquid phage filtrate, injections, aerosols, tablets, formulas for local application. Parenteral route; orally; locally (topical infections) | Injections, aerosols, formulas for local application; parenteral route; oral application limited by proteolysis; locally (topical infections) |
| Pharmacokinetics | Not well defined; size and capsid protein composition affects blood and systemic concentration regulated by reticuloendothelial system’s clearance and immune cellular defense mechanisms; self-replicating agent and the concentration increase at the infection site | Well defined for each protein; chemical structure affects penetration, plasma protein binding, and proteolysis degradation—effective concentration; concentration at the infection site related on the systemic concentration and blood circulation |
| Combined therapy | Cocktail of phages (3–5) or phage–protein; antibiotic–phage–protein combination; prevention of resistance development; extended activity spectrum; synergistic effect possible | Combined therapy of protein–protein; phage–protein; antibiotic–protein; antibiotic–phage–protein; prevention of resistance development; extended activity spectrum; synergistic effect possible |
The application of phage-derived enzymes in animal models
| Pathogen | Enzyme | Model | Delivery route | Dose used | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phage lysins | ||||||
|
| Pal amidase from pneumococcal phage Dp-1 | Mouse model of nasopharyngeal colonization | Topical nasal and pharyngeal administration | Single dose of 1400 U or 700 U | Bacteria eradication | (Loeffler et al. |
| Cpl-1 lysozyme from pneumococcal phage Cp-1 | Mouse model of bacteremia and nasopharyngeal colonization | Intravenous injection and topical nasal administration | Single dose of 2000 μg | Bacterial eradication; 80% of animals protected from death | (Loeffler et al. | |
| Rat model of pneumococcal endocarditis and bacteremia | Intravenous injection | 10 mg/kg, followed by a continuous infusion of 5 mg/kg/h for 6 h or 250 mg/kg, followed by continuous infusion of 250 mg/kg/h for 6 h | Bacteria eradication obtained with a high dose (250 mg/kg) | (Entenza et al. | ||
| Non-invasive mouse model of nasal mucosa infection | Topical intranasal administration | Two doses of 1000 μg | Bacteria eradication in 90% of animals; 100% prevention of acute otitis media | (McCullers et al. | ||
| Rat model of meningitis | Intracisternal injection | Single dose of 20 mg/kg for intracisternal injection and 200 mg/kg for intraperitoneal administration | Bacterial cfu reduction of 3 orders (intracisternal injection) and 2 orders (intraperitoneal administration) | (Grandgirard et al. | ||
| Mouse model of pneumococcal pneumonia and nasopharyngeal colonization | Intraperitoneal injection and topical intranasal administration | Multidose treatment of 1 mg | 100% of animals protected from death | (Witzenrath et al. | ||
| Mouse model of pneumococcal pneumonia and nasopharyngeal colonization | Inhalation of aerosolized Cpl-1 | Aerosolized single dose of 25 μL | 80% of animals protected from death | (Doehn et al. | ||
| Pal and Cpl-1 | Mouse model of sepsis | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 200 μg; 1100 U of both enzymes | Bacteria eradication | (Jado et al. | |
| Cpl-711 chimeric lysozyme | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 25–500 μg | 100% of animals protected from death | (Díez-Martínez et al. | |
|
| PlyC amidase, peptidase from streptococcal phage C1 | Mouse model of nasopharyngeal colonization | Topical oral and nasal administration | Single dose of different amount of enzyme (250–1000 U) | Bacteria eradication; 100% prevention against streptococcal colonization | (Nelson et al. |
|
| PlyPy peptidase from | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Two doses of 1 mg | Bacterial cfu reduction of 2 orders; 50% of animals protected from death | (Lood et al. |
|
| PlyGBS peptidase, lysozyme from streptococcal phage NCTC 11261 | Mouse model of vaginal infection and oropharynx colonization | Topical intravaginal, oral and intranasal administration | Single dose of 10 U | Bacterial cfu reduction of 3 orders (vaginal infection) and 2 orders (oropharynx colonization) | (Cheng et al. |
| PlyGBS90–1 peptidase, lysozyme (modified PlyGBS) | Mouse model of vaginal infection | Topical intravaginal administration | Single dose of 30 nmol | Bacterial cfu reduction of 4 orders | (Cheng and Fischetti | |
| PlySs2 amidase, peptidase from | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 2 mg | 94% and 89% of animals protected from death for | (Gilmer et al. | |
| Mouse model of nasal mucosa infection | Topical intranasal administration | Single dose of 0,1 mg | Bacterial cfu reduction of > 4 orders | (Gilmer et al. | ||
| MV-L amidase, peptidase from staphylococcal phage phiMR11 | Mouse model of nasal infection and bacteremia | Topical intranasal administration and intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 310–500 U | 100% of animals protected from death | (Rashel et al. | |
| ClyS chimeric amidase, peptidase | Mouse model of nasal infection and bacteremia | Topical intranasal administration and intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 960 μg in nasal model; single dose of 2 mg in systemic model | Bacterial cfu reduction of 2 orders (nasal model); 88% of animals protected from death (systemic model) | (Daniel et al. | |
| Mouse model of skin infection | Topical skin application | Single dose of 1%, 6%, or 10% (wt/wt) | Bacterial cfu reduction of 3 orders (10% dose) | (Pastagia et al. | ||
| LysGH15 amidase, peptidase from staphylococcal phage, GH15 | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 5–100 μg | Bacteria eradication; 100% of animals protected from death for ≥50 μg dose | (Gu et al. | |
| Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 50 μg | Bacteria eradication | (Gu et al. | ||
| Mouse model of bacteremia | Intravenous injection | Single dose of 50 μg | Bacterial cfu reduction of 4 orders; 100% of animals protected from death | (Zhang et al. | ||
| P-27/HP endolysin (unknown mode of action) from staphylococcal phage P-27/HP | Mouse model of bacteremia and healthy mice (safety test) | Intraperitoneal injection (for model of bacteremia) and intramuscular, subcutaneous, intravenous, and intraperitoneal injections for safety test on healthy mice | Single dose of 250 μg | Bacterial cfu reduction of 3 orders | (Gupta and Prasad | |
| P128 chimeric VAL amidase, peptidase | Rat model of nasal infection | Topical intranasal administration | Single dose of 100 μg | Bacterial cfu reduction of ≥ 3 orders | (Paul et al. | |
| λSA2-E-Lyso-SH3b chimeric peptidase | Mouse model of mastitis | Intramammary infusion | Single dose of 25 μg | Bacterial cfu reduction of 0.63–0.81 orders | (Schmelcher et al. | |
| Ply187AN-KSH3b chimeric peptidase | Mouse model of endophthalmitis | Intravitreal injection | Single dose of 1 μg/eye | Bacterial cfu reduction of 1 order; significant effects in protecting eyes from endophthalmitis | (Singh et al. | |
| 80αLyt2 amidase, peptidase from staphylococcal phage phi80α | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 200 μg | 100% of animals protected from death | (Schmelcher et al. | |
| phi11 amidase, peptidase from staphylococcal phage phi11 | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 200 μg | 100% of animals protected from death | (Schmelcher et al. | |
| LysK amidase, peptidase from staphylococcal phage K | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 200 μg | 100% of animals protected from death | (Schmelcher et al. | |
| 2638A amidase, peptidase from | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 200 μg | 100% of animals protected from death | (Schmelcher et al. | |
| LysWMY amidase, peptidase from staphylococcal phage phiWMY | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 200 μg | 100% of animals protected from death | (Schmelcher et al. | |
| PlyTW amidase, peptidase from staphylococcal phage Twort | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 200 μg | 50% of animals protected from death | (Schmelcher et al. | |
| phiSH2 amidase, peptidase from | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 200 μg | 50% of animals protected from death | (Schmelcher et al. | |
| P68 amidase, peptidase from staphylococcal phage phiP68 | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of ∼ 120 μg | No protecting effect (low solubility) | (Schmelcher et al. | |
| SAL-1 amidase, peptidase from the staphylococcal phage SAP-1 | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intravenous injection | Two doses of 12.5–25 mg/kg | Bacteria eradication | (Jun et al. | |
| Healthy rats and dogs (safety test) | Intravenous injection | Multiple doses of 25–100 mg/kg | No serious adverse symptoms observed | (Jun et al. | ||
| Healthy monkeys (safety test) | Intravenous injection | Multiple doses of 1–80 mg/kg | No serious adverse symptoms observed | (Jun et al. | ||
| Clinical trial on healthy male volunteers (safety test) | Intravenous injection | Single and escalating dose of 0.1–10 mg/kg | No serious adverse symptoms observed | (Jun et al. | ||
|
| PlyG amidase from | Mouse model of peritonitis and bacteremia | Intravitreal injection | Single dose of 50–150 U | ~ 70% of animals protected from death | (Schuch et al. |
| PlyPH amidase from | Mouse model of peritonitis and bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 1.2 mg/ml | 40% of animals protected from death | (Yoong et al. | |
|
| PlyF307 lysozyme from | Mouse model of bacteremia and mouse in vivo catheter model | Intraperitoneal injection and topical injection directly into the catheter under the skin | Single dose of 1 mg for intraperitoneal injection and two doses of 1 mg for topical application | 50% of animals protected from death; catheter biofilm reduction | (Lood et al. |
|
| Artilysin® (PVP-SE1gp146 lysozyme combining a polycationic nonapeptide) | Model of | Oral and topical administration | 20 μg/ml per well (~ 10 nematodes per well) | 40–63% of animals protected from death (in the presence of 0.5 mM EDTA) | (Briers et al. |
| Phage depolymerases | ||||||
| EndoE endosialidase from coliphage E | Neonatal rat model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 20 μg | 100% of animals protected from death | (Mushtaq et al. | |
| Neonatal rat model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Single dose of 0.25 μg | 80% of animals protected from death | (Mushtaq et al. | ||
| P22sTsp endorhamnosidase from | Chicken model of gastrointestinal infection | Oral administration | Multiple doses of 30 μg | Bacterial cfu reduction of ~ 1 order | (Waseh et al. | |
|
| K64dep capsule depolymerase from | Mouse model of bacteremia | Intraperitoneal injection | Multiple doses of 18.75–150 μg | 100% of animals protected from death | (Pan et al. |
| depoKP36 capsule depolymerase from | Injection into the last pro-leg | Single dose of 280 μg/ml | 40% of animals protected from death | (Majkowska-Skrobek et al. | ||
|
| LKA1gp49 LPS lyase from | Injection into the last pro-leg | Single dose of 0.05–0.5 μg | 20% of animals protected from death | (Olszak et al. | |