Advancements in bacteriophage therapies and delivery for bacterial infection
Abstract
Having co-evolved with bacteria over hundreds of millions of years, bacteriophage are effective killers of specific bacterial hosts. Therefore, phage therapies for infection are a promising treatment avenue, can provide a solution for antibiotic resistant bacterial infections, and have specified targeting of infectious bacteria while allowing the natural microbiome to survive which systemic antibiotics often wipe out. Many phages have well studied genomes that can be modified to change target, widen target range, or change mode of action of killing bacterial hosts. Phage delivery can also be designed to increase efficacy of treatment, including encapsulation and delivery via biopolymers. Increased research into phage potential for therapies can allow new avenues to develop to treat a larger range of infections.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Recent Review Articles, Popular Advances and Editor’s Choice: Kaushik Chatterjee