AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacteriophage host range depends on how phages interact with their potential bacterial hosts, impacting their effectiveness in phage therapy.
  • The common belief that using multiple host bacteria during phage isolation leads to a broader host range was tested, but results showed no significant difference between isolating phages from one or four hosts.
  • While there are reliable methods to isolate phages with broader host ranges, such as sequential isolation, simply using multiple hosts does not guarantee the same outcome.

Article Abstract

Bacteriophage host range is a result of the interactions between phages and their hosts. For phage therapy, phages with a broader host range are desired so that a phage can infect and kill the broadest range of pathogen strains or related species possible. A common, but not well-tested, belief is that using multiple hosts during the phage isolation will make the isolation of broader host range phage more likely. Using a group system, we compared the host ranges of phages isolated on one or four hosts and found that there was no difference in the breadth of host ranges of the isolated phages. Both narrow and broader host range phage were also equally likely to be isolated from either isolation procedure. While there are methods that reliably isolate broader host range phages, such as sequential host isolation, and there are other reasons to use multiple hosts during isolation, multiple hosts are not a consistent way to obtain broader host range phages.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9960766PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v15020518DOI Listing

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