Collateral sensitivity increases the efficacy of a rationally designed bacteriophage combination to control Salmonella enterica

  • Acton L
  • Pye H
  • Thilliez G
  • et al.
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Abstract

As antibiotic resistance continues to emerge in bacterial pathogens, bacterial viruses (phage) represent a potential alternative or adjunct to antibiotics. One challenge for their implementation is the predisposition of bacteria to rapidly acquire resistance to phages. We describe a functional genomics approach to identify mechanisms of susceptibility and resistance for newly isolated phages that infect and lyse Salmonella enterica and use this information to identify phage combinations that exploit collateral sensitivity, thus increasing efficacy. Collateral sensitivity is a phenomenon where resistance to one class of antibiotics increases sensitivity to a second class of antibiotics. We report a functional genomics approach to rationally design a phage combination with a collateral sensitivity dynamic which resulted in increased efficacy. Considering such evolutionary trade-offs has the potential to manipulate the outcome of phage therapy in favor of resolving infection without selecting for escape mutants and is applicable to other virus-host interactions.

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Acton, L., Pye, H. V., Thilliez, G., Kolenda, R., Matthews, M., Turner, A. K., … Kingsley, R. A. (2024). Collateral sensitivity increases the efficacy of a rationally designed bacteriophage combination to control Salmonella enterica. Journal of Virology, 98(3). https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01476-23

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