| Literature DB >> 36211951 |
Valéry Daubie1,2, Houssein Chalhoub1,3, Bob Blasdel4, Hafid Dahma2, Maya Merabishvili5, Tea Glonti5, Nathalie De Vos6, Johan Quintens4, Jean-Paul Pirnay5, Marie Hallin3, Olivier Vandenberg1,3,7.
Abstract
As the global burden of disease caused by multidrug resistant bacteria is a major source of concern, credible clinical alternatives to antibiotic therapy, such as personalized phage therapy, are actively explored. Although phage therapy has been used for more than a century, the issue of an easy to implement diagnostic tool for determining phage susceptibility that meets current routine clinical needs is still open. In this Review, we summarize the existing methods used for determining phage activity on bacteria, including the three reference methods: the spot test, the double agar overlay plaque assay, and the Appelmans method. The first two methods rely on the principle of challenging the overnight growth of a lawn of bacteria in an agar matrix to a known relative phage to bacteria concentration and represent good screening tools to determine if the tested phage can be used for a "passive" and or "active" treatment. Beside these methods, several techniques, based on "real-time" growth kinetics assays (GKA) have been developed or are under development. They all monitor the growth of clinical isolates in the presence of phages, but use various detection methods, from classical optical density to more sophisticated techniques such as computer-assisted imagery, flow-cytometry, quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) or metabolic indicators. Practical considerations as well as information provided about phage activity are reviewed for each technique. Finally, we also discuss the analytical and interpretative requirements for the implementation of a phage susceptibility testing tool in routine clinical microbiology.Entities:
Keywords: clinical microbiology; diagnosis; personalized medicine; phage (bacteriophage); susceptibility
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36211951 PMCID: PMC9532704 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2022.1000721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 6.073
Figure 1Spot test and double agar overlay plaque assays. Top: Graphical representation of the different layers deposited in a Petri dish for (A) a double agar overlay plaque assay and (B) a spot test. Middle: Illustration of the testing of the effect of a PEV2 phage suspension (~1011pfu/ml) on a Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolate by (C) a double agar overlay plaque assay (the dilution illustrated here is 10-9) and (D) a spot test using ten-fold serial dilutions of the phage (10-6 to 10-11 as indicated). D2: Enlargement of the dilution 10-6 spot showing a completely clear (non-turbid) spot indicating that phages killed the tested bacteria. D3: The 10-9 dilution spot leads to distinguished plaques. In both (C) and D3, the titration of phage, expressed in PFU/mL, can be determined by counting the number of plaques, reported to the concentration and the volume of the phage suspension engaged. In the case illustrated in C, approximately 41 plaques are observed for a plaque assay performed with 100µL of the 10-9 dilution. The titer is thus calculated as follows: T = 41 pfu/(10-1mL*10-9) = 41*1010 pfu/mL Bottom: Examples of different forms and shapes that can be observed in double agar overlay plaque assays [(E–J) – white background] and spot tests [(K–P) - black background] using 3 different phages (LUZ19, 14/1 and PEV2) on 6 different P. aeruginosa isolates. Plaques size is influenced by multiple phage’s intrinsic factors such as its size, latency period and burst size. (E) large plaques with halo indicating in situ phage propagation and amplification; (F) clear intermediate to small plaques with halo, (G) Intermediate clear plaques. I: turbid plaques. In both (E, F), the clear zones in the plaques indicate in situ phage replication, the turbid halo around the clear zone indicates that the phage replication in this zone does not lyse all the bacterial cells, but slows their growth noticeably enough that you can distinguish the slight disturbance on the solid medium. If this happens with high enough frequency all the plaque will look turbid, as observed in (I); (H, J) clear small and tiny plaques indicating in situ lytic phage replication and propagation. (K) clear lytic spot, indicating phage killing. In situ amplification of phages might occur as well, but is not detected by the method; (L) clear spot with few re-growing colonies suggesting pre-existing resistance or in vitro occurring of resistance mechanism; (M) turbid spot, and (N) slight disturbance of the lawn (very faint halo). Both (M, N) are indicative of abortive infection (limited phage propagation); (O) several plaques with slight disturbance to lawn, and (P) numerous clear to turbid plaques with slight disturbance to lawn. Both (O, P) might indicate the presence of a temperate phage in the tested bacterial population.
Features overview of several methods currently used for phage susceptibility determination.
| Methods | Principles | Flexibility | Equipment- infrastructure | Ref. | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Short description | EP/RT | TAT (h)* | Hands-on | Detection | Throughput | Need of a ref. strain | Custom range (phages/bacteria) | Specific equipment | Specific reagents/consumables | Expertise | ||||
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| Ref. | Spot test | Challenging in a Petri dish the growth in the agar matrix of a bacterial lawn with drops of phage suspension. After overnight incubation, a lysis zone (spot) is visible in areas corresponding to the drop sites of active phages. | EP | 18 | ++ (Manual) | NE, Automation possible | Medium | No | Yes/Yes | No | No | +++ | ( |
| Ref. | Overlay plaque assay | Growing multiple preparations composed of a same titration of a bacterial host with different phage dilutions, in a molten agar matrix and dispersed evenly onto solid agar (one Petri dish per preparation). After overnight incubation, a “plaque” is a zone where bacterial growth was prevented by the effect of the phage. | EP | 18 | +++ (Manual) | NE, Automation possible | Low | Yes (EOP calculation) | Yes/Yes | No | No | +++ | ( | |
| GKA using imaging of plaque growth | Counting and monitoring of plaque growth (see plaque assay) kinetics of a plaque assay using computer-assisted lensless device imaging. | RT | 3- 18 | ++ (Manual) | Automated | Low | No | Yes/Yes | Yes | No | + | ( | ||
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| Ref. | Appelmans | Monitoring the competition of a phage and a bacterial strain in a liquid culture medium over time (either in series of tubes or in 96 well plates). Over a three days’ incubation, the culture is first watched for visible lysis, then for appearance of “re-growth” by resistant mutants. | EP | 18-72 | ++ (Manual/Semi-automated) | NE, Automation possible | Medium/high | No | Yes/Yes | No | No | + | ( |
| GKA using PMA - qPCR | Enumeration of bacterial cells surviving phage exposure in a liquid culture using propidium monoazide, a microbial membrane-impermeable dye that inhibits amplification of extracellular DNA and DNA within dead or membrane-compromised cells prior to amplification by qPCR using bacterial specific primers | RT | 5 | ++ (Manual/Semi-automated) | Automated | Medium/high | No | Yes/No | Yes | Yes | ++ | ( | ||
| GKA using Flow cytometry | Enumeration and viability status evaluation (live, damaged and dead cells) of bacterial cells exposed to phages in a liquid culture, based on light scattering and fluorescence using live/dead dyes | EP/RT | 1-2 | ++ (Manual) | Automated | Medium | No | Yes/Yes | Yes | Yes | ++ | ( | ||
| GKA using Optical density | Optical density real-time measurement of a liquid bacterial culture in the presence of phages in a 96 well plate using an automated plate reader optical density over time in an incubating, aerated environment. | RT | up to 12 | + (Automated) | Automated | High | No | Yes/Yes | No | No | + | ( | ||
| GKA using Tetrazolium Dye | Colorimetric real-time measurement of a liquid bacterial culture in the presence of phages in a 96 well plate using an automated plate reader. The signal is produced by metabolically active cells reducing a tetrazolium dye. | ( | ||||||||||||
EP, EndPoint; EOP, Efficiency of Plating; qPCR, quantitative real-time Polymerase Chain Reaction; Ref., Reference; RT, RealTime; NE, Naked Eye; GKA, Growth Kinetics Assay; PMA, Propidium Monoazide; TAT, Turn Around Time; *starting from pure bacterial culture.
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| phage infection that ends with both bacterial and phage death. |
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| phage therapy achieving both lysis and “actively” produce new virions for eliminating the target bacteria, |
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| average number of phage particles produced per lysed infected bacterium |
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| duration of a phage infection, begins with attachment and nucleic acid translocation into the bacterial cell, and (for obligately lytic phages) ends with bacterial lysis. |
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| bacterial lysis occurring at the adsorption stage, resulting from the disruption of the cell wall either due to multiple phage adsorption or to the action of phage lysins. This lysis -as opposed to the lysis occurring at the end of a phage life cycle (lysis from within)- does not release progeny, and can be considered as a form of abortive excessive multiple infection. |
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| ratio of infecting phages to bacterial target cells. When referring to a suspension of bacterial cells inoculated with phages particles, the added ratio can be referred to as “MOIinput”, whereas the terms “MOIactual ” or “multiplicity of adsorption” refer to the actual adsorbed ratio, counting only those phages that have attached to and then infected bacteria |
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| Obligately lytic phages exclusively attempt to take over the machinery of the cell, lyse it, and release new phage particles. |
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| small area without bacterial growth, observed in mixed suspension of bacteria and phages incubated in agar gel. It indicates that phages have replicated, lysed the bacteria and propagated in this area. |
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| a phage infection that directly leads to the maturation and release of phage progeny |
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| usually the bacterial strain from which the phage has first been isolated or is produced. |
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| any bacterial strain that a particular phage is unable to replicate in |
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| growth inhibition observed in a zone of a bacterial lawn where a phage suspension was dropped before incubation (spot test). A spot formation indicates the phage suspension was able to inhibit the bacterial lawn formation rather than phage infection and/or adsorption had indeed occurred. |
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| phages with the capacity to silence host lethal genes and persist in their host cell incorporating their nucleic acid into the hosts’ chromosome. |