New framework redefines phage therapy for combating antimicrobial resistance

· News-Medical

A new perspective article in Biocontaminant proposes a three-part evolutionary framework for using bacteriophages to better control antimicrobial resistance.

Antimicrobial resistance, or AMR, is one of the most urgent threats to global health. As more bacteria become resistant to existing antibiotics, scientists are looking for new ways to fight infections without damaging beneficial microbes. One promising option is bacteriophage therapy, which uses viruses that naturally infect bacteria.

But a new perspective article suggests that phages are more complicated than simple bacterial killers. The authors propose a phage-host evolutionary triad that can help explain when phages destroy antibiotic-resistant bacteria, when they protect them, and how the environment controls this switch.

The framework includes three states. First, in the arms race state, phages and bacteria constantly evolve new attack and defense tools. This conflict can inspire precision technologies, such as CRISPR-based systems that target antibiotic resistance genes. Second, in the selfish guardian state, phages may help bacterial hosts survive by providing protective traits, metabolic advantages, or immunity against other phages. This means phages can sometimes stabilize resistant bacteria instead of eliminating them. Third, ecological feedback determines whether phages shift toward killing bacteria or living with them, depending on factors such as host density, nutrients, stress, pH, and redox conditions.

The authors argue that this understanding could guide future AMR control under the One Health framework, which connects human, animal, and environmental health. In engineered systems such as wastewater treatment plants, adjusting environmental conditions may one day help push phages toward killing resistant bacteria. In natural environments, such as soils and rivers, the approach will require careful monitoring to avoid unintended effects.

"The goal is not simply to release phages, but to steer phage-host evolution in the right direction," Zhang said. "By learning how to shift phages from protection to targeted killing, we may open new pathways for reducing the global spread of antimicrobial resistance."

Source:

Shenyang Agricultural University

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