Project description:Phage therapy is a therapeutic approach to treat multidrug resistant infections that employs lytic bacteriophages (phages) to eliminate bacteria. Despite the abundant evidence for its success as an antimicrobial in Eastern Europe, there is scarce data regarding its effects on the human host. Here, we aimed to understand how lytic phages interact with cells of the airway epithelium, the tissue site that is colonized by bacterial biofilms in numerous chronic respiratory disorders. Using a panel of Pseudomonas aeruginosa phages and human airway epithelial cells derived from a person with cystic fibrosis, we determined that interactions between phages and epithelial cells depend on specific phage properties as well as physiochemical features of the microenvironment. Although poor at internalizing phages, the airway epithelium responds to phage exposure by changing its transcriptional profile and secreting antiviral and proinflammatory cytokines that correlate with specific phage families. Overall, our findings indicate that mammalian responses to phages are heterogenous and could potentially alter the way that respiratory local defenses aid in bacterial clearance during phage therapy. Thus, besides phage receptor specificity in a particular bacterial isolate, the criteria to select lytic phages for therapy should be expanded to include mammalian cell responses.
Project description:After the attachment of the lytic phage T4 to Escherichia coli cells, 1% E. coli cells showed an approximately 40-fold increase in mutant frequency. They were designated as mutator A global transcriptome analysis using microarrays was conducted to determine the difference between parental strain and mutators, and the host responce after adsorption of the phage and the ghost.
Project description:Quorum sensing (QS) is the cell density-dependent virulence factor regulator in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Here, we elucidate PIT2, a phage-encoded inhibitor of the QS regulator LasR, derived from the lytic Pseudomonas phage LMA2. PIT2 inhibits the effectors PrpL and LasA of the type 2 secretion system of P. aeruginosa and attenuates bacterial virulence towards HeLa cells and in Galleria mellonella. Using RNAseq-based differential gene expression analysis, the effect of PIT2 on the LasR regulatory network was revealed. Moreover, the specific interaction between LasR and PIT2 was determined. These data expand our knowledge on phage-encoded modulators of the bacterial metabolism, as this examples an anti-virulence protein derived from a lytic phage. From an applied perspective, this phage protein reveals and exploits an interesting anti-virulence target in P. aeruginosa. As such, it lays the foundation for a new phage-inspired anti-virulence strategy to combat multidrug resistant pathogens and opens the door for SynBio applications.
Project description:Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola (Pph) is a significant bacterial pathogen of agricultural crops, and phage Φ6 and other members of the dsRNA virus family Cystoviridae undergo lytic (virulent) infection of Pph, using the type IV pilus as the initial site of cellular attachment. Despite the popularity of Pph/phage Φ6 as a model system in evolutionary biology, Pph resistance to phage Φ6 remains poorly characterized. To investigate differences between phage Φ6 resistant Pseudomonas syringae pathovar phaseolicola strains, we performed expression analysis of super and non piliated strains of Pseudomonas syringae to determine the genetic cause of resistance to viral infection.
Project description:hvKP ATCC43816 and its lytic phage H5 were employed as a phage-antibiotic combination model. Based on the comprehensive characterization of phages, including cryo-electron microscopy, we evaluated the synergic effect of H5 on bacterial killing in vitro when combined with multiple antibiotics, and analyzed the advantages of phage-antibiotic combinations from an evolutionary perspective and proposes a novel PAS mechanism by using ceftazidime as an example.
Project description:After the attachment of the lytic phage T4 to Escherichia coli cells, 1% E. coli cells showed an approximately 40-fold increase in mutant frequency. They were designated as mutator A global transcriptome analysis using microarrays was conducted to determine the difference between parental strain and mutators.
Project description:Many, if not all, bacteria use quorum sensing (QS) to control gene expression and collective behaviours, and more recently QS has also been discovered in bacteriophages (phages). Phages can produce communication molecules of their own, or “listen in” on the host’s communication processes, in order to switch between lytic and lysogenic modes of infection. In this project, we studied the interaction of Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of cholera disease, with the lysogenic vibriophage VP882. The lytic cycle of VP882 is induced by the QS molecule DPO (3,5-dimethylpyrazin-2-ol), however, the global regulatory consequences of DPO-mediated VP882 activation have remained unclear. Using a combination of transcriptomic, genetic, and biochemical approaches, we discovered that induction of VP882 results in binding of phage transcripts to the major RNA chaperone Hfq, which in turn outcompete and down-regulate host-derived Hfq-dependent small RNAs (sRNAs). VP882 itself also encodes Hfq-binding sRNAs and we demonstrate that one of these sRNAs, named VpdS, modulates the expression of multiple host and phage mRNAs through a base-pairing mechanism and thereby promotes phage replication. We further show that host-derived sRNAs can affect phage replication by interfering with the translation of phage mRNAs and thus might be part of the phage defence arsenal of the host. Taken together, our data draw a complex picture of post-transcriptional interactions occurring between host- and phage-derived transcripts that together determine the phage-mediated lysis program.
Project description:Many, if not all, bacteria use quorum sensing (QS) to control gene expression and collective behaviours, and more recently QS has also been discovered in bacteriophages (phages). Phages can produce communication molecules of their own, or “listen in” on the host’s communication processes, in order to switch between lytic and lysogenic modes of infection. In this project, we studied the interaction of Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of cholera disease, with the lysogenic vibriophage VP882. The lytic cycle of VP882 is induced by the QS molecule DPO (3,5-dimethylpyrazin-2-ol), however, the global regulatory consequences of DPO-mediated VP882 activation have remained unclear. Using a combination of transcriptomic, genetic, and biochemical approaches, we discovered that induction of VP882 results in binding of phage transcripts to the major RNA chaperone Hfq, which in turn outcompete and down-regulate host-derived Hfq-dependent small RNAs (sRNAs). VP882 itself also encodes Hfq-binding sRNAs and we demonstrate that one of these sRNAs, named VpdS, modulates the expression of multiple host and phage mRNAs through a base-pairing mechanism and thereby promotes phage replication. We further show that host-derived sRNAs can affect phage replication by interfering with the translation of phage mRNAs and thus might be part of the phage defence arsenal of the host. Taken together, our data draw a complex picture of post-transcriptional interactions occurring between host- and phage-derived transcripts that together determine the phage-mediated lysis program.
Project description:Many, if not all, bacteria use quorum sensing (QS) to control gene expression and collective behaviours, and more recently QS has also been discovered in bacteriophages (phages). Phages can produce communication molecules of their own, or “listen in” on the host’s communication processes, in order to switch between lytic and lysogenic modes of infection. In this project, we studied the interaction of Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of cholera disease, with the lysogenic vibriophage VP882. The lytic cycle of VP882 is induced by the QS molecule DPO (3,5-dimethylpyrazin-2-ol), however, the global regulatory consequences of DPO-mediated VP882 activation have remained unclear. Using a combination of transcriptomic, genetic, and biochemical approaches, we discovered that induction of VP882 results in binding of phage transcripts to the major RNA chaperone Hfq, which in turn outcompete and down-regulate host-derived Hfq-dependent small RNAs (sRNAs). VP882 itself also encodes Hfq-binding sRNAs and we demonstrate that one of these sRNAs, named VpdS, modulates the expression of multiple host and phage mRNAs through a base-pairing mechanism and thereby promotes phage replication. We further show that host-derived sRNAs can affect phage replication by interfering with the translation of phage mRNAs and thus might be part of the phage defence arsenal of the host. Taken together, our data draw a complex picture of post-transcriptional interactions occurring between host- and phage-derived transcripts that together determine the phage-mediated lysis program.
Project description:Synechococcus WH8102 axenic infected with lytic phage S-SSM5. Culture supernatants were collected over a time course, and analyzed by LC-MS/MS.