Could this be a new weapon against antibiotic resistance?

Christian LaVallee prepares solutions for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests at the Health Protection Agency in north London March 9, 2011. For decades scientists have managed to develop new medicines to stay at least one step ahead of the ever-mutating enemy, bacteria. Now, though, we may be running out of road. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, commonly known as MRSA, alone is estimated to kill around 19,000 people every year in the United States -- far more than HIV and AIDS -- and a similar number in Europe, and other drug-resistant superbugs are spreading. Picture taken March 9, 2011.

This virus performs a neat evolutionary trick, and scientists came across in a Connecticut pond. Image: REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett

Bill Hathaway
Associate Director Science and Medicine, Yale

Yale researchers were fishing for a new weapon against antibiotic resistance and found one floating in a Connecticut pond, they report May 26 in the journal Scientific Reports.

The virus called a bacteriophage, found in Dodge Pond in East Lyme, attacks a common multi-drug resistant bacterial pathogen called Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which can lethally infect people with compromised immune systems. In a neat evolutionary trick, the virus attaches to the cell membrane where bacteria pump out antibiotics, a system that had originally evolved to resist antibiotics. The presence of the virus in turn leads to evolutionary changes in the bacterial membrane that makes this pumping mechanism less efficient. This makes bacteria once more susceptible to existing antibiotics.

 Deaths from drug-resistant infections set to skyrocket
Image: Statista

“We have been looking for natural products that are useful in combating important pathogens,” said Paul Turner, professor and chair of the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. “What’s neat about this virus is it binds to something the organism needs to become pathogenic, and backs it into an evolutionary corner such that it becomes more sensitive to currently failing antibiotics.”

The virus should help preserve our limited antibiotic arsenal in combating deadly bacteria, he said.

This “phage” therapy could be used in conjunction with antibiotics to treat dangerous P. aeruginosainfections that afflict patients with severe burns, surgical wounds, cystic fibrosis, and other conditions that compromise the immune system.

Turner also noted that other phages hold promise to combat bacterial pathogens that cause economic losses in plant and animal agriculture, and those that contaminate pipes and equipment such as bioreactors in food manufacturing..

Benjamin K. Chan is lead author of the study.

The work was funded by National Science Foundation and the Project High Hopes Foundation.

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