Pathogen-Phage Geomapping to Overcome Resistance
Abstract
The rise of antibiotic resistance has renewed interest in bacteriophages as therapeutic alternatives. However, co-evolution of phage and bacteria will naturally give rise to phage-resistant pathogens, complicating phage therapy efforts. A critical bottleneck in the production of phage therapeutics is the discovery of virulent phages against resistant pathogens. Conventional methods for discovery are time-consuming, biased, and laborious, limiting the potential for identifying suitable phage candidates.
To overcome these limitations, we combined small-volume environmental sampling with 16S rRNA sequencing to identify reservoirs where bacterial hosts co-exist with their phage predators. This strategy, which we term geographical phage mapping (geΦmapping), pinpoints ecological “hotspots” for targeted phage hunting. We further developed a portable phage hunting device (ΦHD) that generates highly enriched phage concentrates directly from these reservoirs. By integrating geΦmapping with high-throughput enrichment, we constructed the RΦ library, a diverse collection of novel phages targeting resistant pathogens.
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