Acidic polymers reversibly deactivate phages due to pH changes

Abstract

Bacteriophages are promising as therapeutics and biotechnological tools, but they also present a problem for routine and commercial bacterial cultures, where contamination must be avoided. Poly(carboxylic acids) have been reported to inhibit phages’ ability to infect their bacterial hosts and hence offer an exciting route to discover additives to prevent infection. Their mechanism and limitations have not been explored. Here, we report the role of pH in inactivating phages to determine if the polymers are unique or simply acidic. It is shown that lower pH (=3) triggered by either acidic polymers or similar changes in pH using HCl lead to inhibition. There is no inhibitory activity at higher pHs (in growth media). This was shown across a panel of phages and different molecular weights of commercial and controlled-radical polymerization-derived poly(acrylic acid)s. It is shown that poly(acrylic acid) leads to reversible deactivation of phage, but when the pH is adjusted using HCl alone the phage is irreversibly deactivated. Further experiments using metal binders ruled out ion depletion as the mode of action. These results show that polymeric phage inhibitors may work by unique mechanisms of action and that pH alone cannot explain the observed effects whilst also placing constraints on the practical utility of poly(acrylic acid).

Graphical abstract: Acidic polymers reversibly deactivate phages due to pH changes

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Jun 2024
Accepted
15 Aug 2024
First published
23 Aug 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Appl. Polym., 2024, Advance Article

Acidic polymers reversibly deactivate phages due to pH changes

H. L. Marton, A. P. Sagona, P. Kilbride and M. I. Gibson, RSC Appl. Polym., 2024, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4LP00202D

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