Coverage of phage cocktails

Eighty‐nine T4‐like phages from our phage collection were tested against four collections of childhood diarrhoea‐associated Escherichia coli isolates representing different geographical origins (Mexico versus Bangladesh), serotypes (69 O, 27 H serotypes), pathotypes (ETEC, EPEC, EIEC, EAEC, VTEC, Sh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microbial biotechnology 2014-03, Vol.7 (2), p.165-176
Hauptverfasser: Bourdin, Gilles, Navarro, Armando, Sarker, Shafiqul A, Anne‐C. Pittet, Qadri, Firdausi, Sultana, Shamima, Cravioto, Alejandro, Talukder, Kaisar A, Reuteler, Gloria, Brüssow, Harald
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container_end_page 176
container_issue 2
container_start_page 165
container_title Microbial biotechnology
container_volume 7
creator Bourdin, Gilles
Navarro, Armando
Sarker, Shafiqul A
Anne‐C. Pittet
Qadri, Firdausi
Sultana, Shamima
Cravioto, Alejandro
Talukder, Kaisar A
Reuteler, Gloria
Brüssow, Harald
description Eighty‐nine T4‐like phages from our phage collection were tested against four collections of childhood diarrhoea‐associated Escherichia coli isolates representing different geographical origins (Mexico versus Bangladesh), serotypes (69 O, 27 H serotypes), pathotypes (ETEC, EPEC, EIEC, EAEC, VTEC, Shigella), epidemiological settings (community and hospitalized diarrhoea) and years of isolation. With a cocktail consisting of 3 to 14 T4‐like phages, we achieved 54% to 69% coverage against predominantly EPEC isolates from Mexico, 30% to 53% against mostly ETEC isolates from a prospective survey in Bangladesh, 24% to 61% against a mixture of pathotypes isolated from hospitalized children in Bangladesh, and 60% coverage against Shigella isolates. In comparison a commercial Russian phage cocktail containing a complex mixture of many different genera of coliphages showed 19%, 33%, 50% and 90% coverage, respectively, against the four above‐mentioned collections. Few O serotype‐specific phages and no broad‐host range phages were detected in our T4‐like phage collection. Interference phenomena between the phage isolates were observed when constituting larger phage cocktails. Since the coverage of a given T4‐like phage cocktail differed with geographical area and epidemiological setting, a phage composition adapted to a local situation is needed for phage therapy approaches against E. coli pathogens.
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With a cocktail consisting of 3 to 14 T4‐like phages, we achieved 54% to 69% coverage against predominantly EPEC isolates from Mexico, 30% to 53% against mostly ETEC isolates from a prospective survey in Bangladesh, 24% to 61% against a mixture of pathotypes isolated from hospitalized children in Bangladesh, and 60% coverage against Shigella isolates. In comparison a commercial Russian phage cocktail containing a complex mixture of many different genera of coliphages showed 19%, 33%, 50% and 90% coverage, respectively, against the four above‐mentioned collections. Few O serotype‐specific phages and no broad‐host range phages were detected in our T4‐like phage collection. Interference phenomena between the phage isolates were observed when constituting larger phage cocktails. 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subjects Antibiotics
Children
Collection
Diarrhea
E coli
Epidemiology
Geographical distribution
Host range
Laboratory animals
Listeria
Microbiota
Pathogens
Phages
Researchers
Salmonella
Serotypes
Shigella
title Coverage of phage cocktails
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