BBC Science Focus

TOM IRELAND

With the medical world struggling to treat antibiotic­resistant infections, could scientists turn to a group of viruses that explode bacterial cells from within?

- WORDS TOM IRELAND

Bacterioph­ages, viruses that eat bacteria, could help solve the problem of antibiotic­resistant bugs. Tom looks into where they come from and how they work.

Trials of an exciting new way of treating dangerous drugresist­ant infections will start to report results in 2021. These treatments involve patients being injected with billions of virus particles that specifical­ly infect and kill bacteria. Such viruses – known as bacterioph­ages (or just ‘phages’) – are found everywhere there are bacteria and replicate by inserting their genes into bacterial cells. Once infected with the virus genes, the bacterial cell goes awry and starts producing viral proteins, which assemble into new viruses. Within as little as half an hour, the cell bursts and tens or hundreds of new viruses are released to repeat the cycle in another host. They’re remarkably effective at this: some studies suggest that for every grain of sand on Earth there are over a trillion phages in existence at any one time.

Given their natural bacteria-killing abilities, these nanoscopic predators could be key in the fight against the growing problem of antimicrob­ial resistance. And the idea of using them in medicine isn’t really new at all.

Over 100 years ago, in 1919, an eccentric scientist called Félix d’Hérelle breezed into a children’s hospital in Paris and told doctors that he had found a way to treat dysentery (an infection of the intestines). This was decades before antibiotic­s such as penicillin were available, when common bacterial infections killed millions of people a year.

While studying colonies of bacteria, d’Hérelle realised that some kind of disease was spreading through his bacterial plates. Although barely anything was known about viruses at the time, d’Hérelle came to the extraordin­ary conclusion that he had found a virus that preyed on bacteria, not humans – a microbe of a microbe. He named the virus a bacterioph­age (‘bacteria-eater’) and began using it to kill off bacterial infections in animals.

This was long before the existence of regulators like the Federal Drug Administra­tion (FDA) in the US or the Medicines and Healthcare products

Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the UK, who rigorously test new drugs and therapies before they’re approved for use in patients. So to prove his experiment­al treatment was safe to use on children with dysentery, d’Hérelle simply drank a vial of the phages in front of the hospital doctors. The doctors agreed that if he was alive the next day, they’d try the treatment at the hospital.

The next day, d’Hérelle was fine (he’d already tested the phages on himself and his family). When several desperatel­y ill children arrived suffering from dysentery, they were each given a vial of the pure bacterial viruses to drink. The treatment was a success. The children quickly recovered and left hospital within days. His phages were soon being touted as the latest wonder drug and by the 1930s were being shipped around the world to treat all manner of different bacterial infections.

THE FORGOTTEN TREATMENT

How come then, in 2020, so few people have heard of phage therapy? And why, given that the world is so desperate for new antibiotic­s, are we not using it in hospitals all the time? It’s a long story, but by the 1950s the Western world had largely forgotten

“SOME STUDIES SUGGEST THAT FOR EVERY GRAIN OF SAND ON EARTH THERE ARE OVER A TRILLION PHAGES”

all about phages. Drugs such as penicillin had come onto the market, and were far cheaper and easier to mass produce than live viruses. In most parts of the world, medical research focused on developing new classes of antibiotic­s and the idea of using viruses to treat infections was gradually abandoned.

The only countries that still used phages to treat infections were Soviet countries, where there was a shortage of drugs like penicillin. But the Cold War prevented any communicat­ion between Soviet scientists and the rest of the world, so their improvemen­ts in using phages went unnoticed. By the 1980s, Western medicine had almost entirely forgotten phage therapy had ever existed.

Now, as drug-resistant bacteria becomes a bigger and bigger problem in hospitals around the world, the idea of using viruses is attracting attention once again. Desperate patients in the US and Europe now travel to ‘phage clinics’ in former Soviet countries, such as Georgia, to try and cure infections that are no longer treatable with antibiotic­s.

Despite the renewed interest, outside these regions phage therapy has only been used successful­ly in a few experiment­al cases. In 2015, scientist Tom Patterson fell ill with pancreatit­is while on holiday in Egypt. The cause turned out to be a multipledr­ug-resistant strain of bacteria. With doctors unable to control the infection, Tom quickly fell into a coma. Almost a year of convention­al treatments failed, but as a last resort, Tom’s wife Steffanie Strathdee, an HIV researcher, decided to do her own research and stumbled upon the idea of using phages to kill the bacteria that was killing her husband.

“DRUGS, SUCH AS PENICILLIN, HAD COME ON THE MARKET, AND WERE FAR CHEAPER AND EASIER TO MASS PRODUCE THAN LIVE VIRUSES”

She spent months trying to connect Tom’s doctors with scientists all over the world who might be able to source the right phages to control the infection (as well as completing the piles of paperwork required to gain legal approval for a treatment that doctors effectivel­y had to make up as they went along). Thanks to injections of an experiment­al cocktail of phages – sourced from Russia, the US Navy and raw sewage – Tom was eventually brought back from the brink of death.

TAILORED COMBINATIO­NS

Phages are not easy to work with. Every different strain of bacteria – of which there are millions – has a particular strain of phage that preys on it. So every patient needs to be treated with exactly the right strain of phage for the bacteria causing their infection.

The body also removes phages from the bloodstrea­m quickly and, just like antibiotic drugs, bacteria can quickly develop a resistance to them. This is why a combinatio­n of phages often must be used to ensure that any bacteria with resistance to one phage are killed by another.

This adds to the complexity of developing a treatment regime. There’s also the fact that up to half of all phages are what are known as ‘temperate phages’. These viruses don’t always burst the bacterial cell open and kill it. Instead, they prefer to lie dormant in the cell’s genome or replicate slowly without killing their host. Scientists can get around this by geneticall­y altering phages so that they use the more violent ‘bursting’ strategy, rather than lurking.

In 2018, at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital, a cocktail of three geneticall­y engineered phages were used to treat a young patient who had suffered from breakouts of multipledr­ug-resistant infections throughout her body for years. The teenage patient had undergone a double lung transplant due to cystic fibrosis, a condition that causes a build-up of mucus in the lungs. Soon after the procedure, despite several courses of antibiotic­s, infections spread from her lungs to her liver and, eventually, there were even pockets of bacteria pushing up through the skin on her arms, legs and buttocks.

Again, the developmen­t of a phage-based treatment required an internatio­nal collaborat­ion of doctors and phage researcher­s to find, purify and engineer the right phages for the particular strain of bacteria in the patient – as well as the laborious bureaucrat­ic hurdles required to give an entirely new and unregulate­d medical treatment to a child. But it was a success – the treatment brought the infection under control and saved the girl’s life.

PHAGE LIBRARIES

These success stories have helped accelerate efforts to develop phage therapy in the US and Europe, with similar good news from experiment­al treatments and trials in animals in other countries. Yet despite these positive examples, there are still major obstacles to phage therapies becoming cost-effective and reliable mainstream treatments.

The main obstacle is that every patient is likely to be infected with a unique mix of bacterial strains, so every treatment must be bespoke. This means drug manufactur­ers can’t mass-produce doses and it has also made it impossible for drug regulators to approve phage therapies: every case is likely to involve a completely different mix of viruses.

Thankfully, collaborat­ive efforts between researcher­s, public health bodies and regulators are helping to overcome these hurdles. The idea is that by using modern DNA-sequencing technology, enormous libraries of phages could be quickly scanned to find a suitable match. Matches could then also be screened to ensure they don’t contain any genes that might cause toxicity in the patient.

“SEVERAL CLINICAL TRIALS ARE UNDERWAY THAT HOPE TO PROVE THAT PHAGES CAN BE A RELIABLE METHOD OF TREATING INFECTIONS”

Drug regulators would assess the safety of the library as a whole, the methods of purifying the phages and the method of administra­tion, rather than trying to assess every individual treatment. When a patient had a drug-resistant infection, informatio­n on the exact strain of bacteria would be sent to a phage library, which would be scanned for suitable matches. The matches would then be sent out in a vial to the hospital where the patient was being treated. With this method, a lifesaving and bespoke cocktail of viruses could be produced in a matter of days.

That’s the plan, at least. Several clinical trials are underway that hope to prove, once and for all, that phages can be a reliable method of treating infections, and the collaborat­ive efforts of authoritie­s, scientists and doctors continue in the hope of setting up regulatory systems that can green-light bespoke phage therapies in a cost-effective way.

Hopefully none of us will ever face the terrifying prospect of an infection with bacteria that are resistant to convention­al antibiotic­s. But if we do, it’s good to know that these ancient bacterial killers can be called upon to help us out.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE LEFT The Franco-Canadian microbiolo­gist Félix d’Hérelle is one of the scientists credited with discoverin­g viruses that feed on bacteria
ABOVE LEFT The Franco-Canadian microbiolo­gist Félix d’Hérelle is one of the scientists credited with discoverin­g viruses that feed on bacteria
 ??  ?? ABOVE RIGHT A bacterioph­age infects an E. coli cell
ABOVE RIGHT A bacterioph­age infects an E. coli cell
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 ??  ?? RIGHT At a Naval medical research unit in Texas, Dr Yoon Hwang checks on the developmen­t of geneticall­y modified bacterioph­ages being developed to treat gum infections
RIGHT At a Naval medical research unit in Texas, Dr Yoon Hwang checks on the developmen­t of geneticall­y modified bacterioph­ages being developed to treat gum infections
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