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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/30695
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dc.contributor.advisorHynes, Alexander-
dc.contributor.authorFatima, Rabia-
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-07T18:19:49Z-
dc.date.available2025-01-07T18:19:49Z-
dc.date.issued2025-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11375/30695-
dc.description.abstractWith a decline in antibiotic effectiveness, there is a renewed interest in using bacterial-specific viruses (bacteriophages or phages) to reduce bacterial loads, alone or with antibiotics. Most phages are therapeutically unsuitable because they are “temperate” and can integrate into the host genome, protecting the host from subsequent phage infections. However, dormant phages can be awakened by stressors such as antibiotics. Here we investigated whether antibiotics can uniquely interact with temperate phages to bias the phage away from dormancy. Model E. coli temperate phage and ciprofloxacin, a DNA-damaging antibiotic, exhibit a potent synergy, resulting in bacterial eradication at sublethal antibiotic concentrations, despite poor killing by the phage alone. Mechanistically, this synergy depletes survivors by awakening dormant phages. To broaden our findings, screening in the multi-drug-resistant pathogen P. aeruginosa, we identified phages that can synergize with four antibiotic classes, despite their widely differing targets - however, these are highly phage, antibiotic, and host-specific. Interestingly, ciprofloxacin also synergized with multiple phages, even in a ciprofloxacin-resistant clinical strain, functionally re-sensitizing the bacterium to the antibiotic. While some of these interactions operated through a mechanism independent of the temperate nature of the phages, ciprofloxacin and piperacillin, a cell wall synthesis inhibitor, specifically reduced the frequency of phage dormancy events. Finally, in a Caenorhabditis elegans infection model, temperate phage-ciprofloxacin pairing increased the lifespan of drug-resistant P. aeruginosa infected worms compared to the uninfected control. Similar rescue was also observed for the phage-carrying strain treated with the antibiotic, supporting that the phage even in its dormant form can enhance antibiotic effectiveness. Overall, we show that temperate phages uniquely synergize with antibiotics at the level of biasing the phage away from dormancy. This is generalizable across phages, antibiotics, and hosts, and shows efficacy in vivo, thereby drastically expanding their therapeutic potential.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectbacteriophagesen_US
dc.subjectantibioticsen_US
dc.subjectphage therapyen_US
dc.subjectantibiotic resistanceen_US
dc.titleLeveraging Temperate Phages To Enhance Antibiotic Effectivenessen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
dc.contributor.departmentBiochemistry and Biomedical Sciencesen_US
dc.description.degreetypeThesisen_US
dc.description.degreeDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)en_US
dc.description.layabstractBacteriophages (phages) are bacterial viruses that present a promising solution to the antibiotic resistance crisis. They can kill bacteria even when antibiotics fail, alone or in combination with them. Most work to date focuses on phages that immediately lyse the bacteria. However, phages that can go dormant within the host are far more abundant but largely ignored in therapy. Once integrated, these can awaken to switch into lytic replication by external triggers that stress the bacterial host, including antibiotics. Supported by this idea, in this thesis I show that these kinds of phages can synergistically interact with antibiotics by biasing the phage away from dormancy. This phenomenon is generalizable across host, phages, and antibiotics and shows effectiveness in an animal model.en_US
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