Phage-mediated immunoassay and method for determining susceptibility of bacteria to antibiotics or beneficial agents

文档序号:1191677 发布日期:2020-08-28 浏览:18次 中文

阅读说明:本技术 用于确定细菌对抗生素或益菌剂的易感性的噬菌体介导的免疫分析和方法 (Phage-mediated immunoassay and method for determining susceptibility of bacteria to antibiotics or beneficial agents ) 是由 A·贝伦基 D·A·斯科菲尔德 于 2018-01-02 设计创作,主要内容包括:提供了用于确定细菌对抗生素剂的敏感性或抗性的方法。在一个实施方案中,所述方法包括在抗微生物剂存在或不存在下培养细菌以产生原代培养物,其然后在转化噬菌体存在或不存在下培养。重组噬菌体对细菌是特异性的,并且包含异源标志物(例如,可表达为可检测产物如RNA或蛋白质的核酸)。细菌对抗微生物剂的易感性或抗性可以通过测定培养物中异源标志物的存在或不存在来确定,其中培养物中标志物的水平或活性与比较培养物中标志物的水平或活性相比降低表明细菌对抗生素剂敏感。(Methods for determining the sensitivity or resistance of a bacterium to an antibiotic agent are provided. In one embodiment, the method comprises culturing the bacteria in the presence or absence of an antimicrobial agent to produce a primary culture, which is then cultured in the presence or absence of transformed phage. Recombinant phages are specific for bacteria and comprise a heterologous marker (e.g., a nucleic acid that can be expressed as a detectable product such as an RNA or protein). Susceptibility or resistance of a bacterium to an antimicrobial agent can be determined by determining the presence or absence of a heterologous marker in culture, wherein a decrease in the level or activity of the marker in culture as compared to the level or activity of the marker in a comparative culture indicates that the bacterium is susceptible to the antibiotic agent.)

1. A method for identifying a bacterial species in a sample, comprising:

incubating a sample with a recombinant bacteriophage transformed to express a heterologous protein marker to form a transformed culture, and determining the presence or absence of the heterologous protein marker in the transformed culture, wherein the presence of the marker indicates the presence of the bacterial species.

2. The method of claim 1, wherein the bacteriophage is selected from the group consisting of a lytic bacteriophage, a lysogenic bacteriophage, and a filamentous bacteriophage.

3. The method of claim 2, wherein the lytic bacteriophage is selected from the group consisting of T4, T7, T3, and MS 2.

4. The method of claim 2, wherein the lysogenic bacteriophage is a lambda bacteriophage.

5. The method of claim 2, wherein the filamentous bacteriophage is selected from the group consisting of fl, fd, and M13.

6. The method of any one of claims 1-5, wherein the marker is expressible as a nucleic acid or protein in the bacterium.

7. The method of claim 6, wherein the marker is expressible as a polypeptide selected from the group consisting of an antigen, an enzyme, an antibody or fragment thereof, and an aptamer, or a combination thereof.

8. The method of claim 7, wherein the protein marker comprises a detectable label.

9. The method of claim 8, wherein the protein marker is detected using an assay selected from the group consisting of fluorescence assay, chemiluminescence assay, enzyme assay, gel electrophoresis, immunoassay, and ligand binding assay.

10. The method of claim 8, wherein the protein marker is detected using a lateral flow immunoassay.

11. The method of any preceding claim, wherein the incubating further comprises incubating in the presence of an antimicrobial agent, wherein expression of the heterologous protein marker indicates bacterial resistance to the antimicrobial agent.

12. A method for simultaneously identifying a bacterial species in a sample and determining its susceptibility to an antimicrobial agent, comprising:

(a) culturing the sample with an antimicrobial agent to produce a primary culture;

(b) culturing the primary culture with a transformed bacteriophage specific to a bacterial species and engineered to express a heterologous marker; and

(c) detecting the presence or absence of the marker, wherein the presence of the marker is indicative of the presence of the bacterial species and its resistance to the antimicrobial agent in the sample.

13. A method for simultaneously identifying a bacterial species in a sample and determining its susceptibility to an antimicrobial agent, comprising:

(a) incubating an aliquot of the sample with or without the antimicrobial agent to produce a set of primary cultures;

(b) culturing a portion of the set of primary cultures with or without transformed phage specific for a bacterial species and engineered to express a heterologous marker, thereby producing a plurality of transformed secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria cultured with an antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria not cultured with an antimicrobial agent; and

(c) detecting the presence or absence of the heterologous marker, wherein the presence of the marker is indicative of the presence of the bacterial species in the sample and its resistance to the antimicrobial agent.

14. A method for determining the susceptibility of a bacterium to a test antimicrobial agent, comprising:

(a) culturing the bacteria in the presence and absence of the antimicrobial agent to produce a primary culture;

(b) culturing a primary culture in the presence and absence of a transforming bacteriophage specific for said bacteria and comprising a marker, thereby producing a plurality of transformed secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with said test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with said antimicrobial agent; and

(c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, thereby determining the susceptibility of the bacterium to the antimicrobial agent.

15. The method of claim 14, wherein a decrease in the level or activity of the marker in the first transformed secondary culture as compared to the level or activity of the marker in the second transformed secondary culture indicates that the bacterium is susceptible to the test antimicrobial.

16. The method of claim 14, wherein a coincidence or an increase in the level or activity of the marker in the first transformed secondary culture as compared to the level or activity of the marker in the second transformed secondary culture (control) indicates that the bacterium is not susceptible to or resistant to the test antimicrobial agent.

17. The method of any one of claims 14-16, wherein the bacteria are selected from the group consisting of gram positive or gram negative bacteria.

18. The method of any one of claims 14-17, wherein the bacterium is selected from the group consisting of acinetobacter baumannii, bacillus anthracis, bacillus cereus, bordetella pertussis, borrelia burgdorferi, brucella abortus, brucella canis, brucella ovis, brucella suis, campylobacter jejuni, chlamydia pneumoniae, chlamydia psittaci, chlamydia trachomatis, clostridium botulinum, clostridium difficile, clostridium perfringens, clostridium tetani, corynebacterium diphtheriae, enterobacter, enterococcus faecalis, vancomycin-resistant enterococcus faecalis, enterococcus faecium, escherichia coli, enterotoxigenic escherichia coli (ETEC), enteropathogenic escherichia coli, escherichia coli 0157: H7, francisella tularensis, haemophilus influenzae, helicobacter pylori, klebsiella pneumoniae, legionella pneumophila, leptospira interrogans, listeria monocytogenes, listeria monocytogenes, bacillus, Mycobacterium leprae, mycobacterium tuberculosis, mycoplasma pneumoniae, neisseria gonorrhoeae, neisseria meningitidis, proteus, pseudomonas aeruginosa, rickettsia rickettsii, salmonella typhi, salmonella typhimurium, shigella sonnei, staphylococcus aureus, staphylococcus epidermidis, staphylococcus saprophyticus, methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (VSA), streptococcus agalactiae, streptococcus pneumoniae, streptococcus pyogenes, treponema pallidum, vibrio cholerae, and yersinia pestis, or a combination thereof.

19. The method of any one of claims 14-17, wherein the bacterium is selected from the group consisting of bacillus anthracis, bacillus subtilis, bacillus thuringiensis, escherichia coli, lactobacillus delbrueckii, lactobacillus plantarum, lactococcus lactis, listeria monocytogenes, pseudomonas aeruginosa, pseudomonas syringae, klebsiella, salmonella, shigella, and staphylococcus aureus.

20. The method of any one of claims 14-19, further comprising validating the detection result by detecting a second marker that is a nucleic acid selected from the group consisting of DNA, RNA, or a combination thereof.

21. The method of claim 20, wherein the level of the second nucleic acid marker is detected using gel electrophoresis, Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), or a combination thereof.

Technical Field

The subject matter described herein relates to methods for determining the susceptibility of a bacterium to a test agent, and methods for determining whether a target bacterial species is resistant to one or more antimicrobial agents. Further embodiments relate to methods of screening novel test compounds for antimicrobial or beneficial bacterial (biological) activity, comprising identifying the presence of these agents in biological samples, including food and environmental samples.

Background

Since the first practical use of the antibiotic penicillin, many other antimicrobial agents have been developed, and antimicrobial therapy has greatly facilitated the advancement and extension of average life in modern medicine. However, pathogenic bacteria have acquired resistance to most antimicrobials, compromising the overall effectiveness of antimicrobial therapy, as well as presenting new public health concerns. In particular, methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) resistant to β -lactam antibacterial agents are highly resistant pathogens. It is directly related to nearly 94,000 new hospitalizations each year, resulting in about 19,000 deaths per year in the United states alone (Voss et al, International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents, 5: 101-. New multidrug-resistant bacterial strains also emerge at an alarming rate, in part due to the increased use of antibiotics in animal husbandry and hospitals. For example, vancomycin-mediated Staphylococcus aureus (VISA) infection in patients treated with vancomycin for MRSA infection has been reported (Hiramatsu et al, JAntimicrob Chemother.40(1),135-6, 1997; Perichon et al, Antimicrob AgentsChemother, 53 (11): 4580-7, 2009). In fact, some strains have developed resistance to almost all commonly used agents. It is well known that Mu50 strain of MRSA is also resistant to aminoglycosides, macrolides, tetracyclines, chloramphenicol and lincosamide (Hiramatsu et al, supra). Multi-drug resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis resistant to isoniazid and rifampicin have also been identified (Dalton et al, Lancet, 380: 1406-17, 2012).

Food-borne bacterial diseases, particularly those caused by drug-resistant bacteria, also pose a significant threat to human health. A microbiological study of detected e.coli analysed 150 food samples including vegetable salad, raw egg surface, raw chicken meat, unpasteurized milk and raw meat showed that the highest percentage of resistant e.coli isolates (23.3%) were detected in the raw chicken meat, followed by vegetable salad (20%), raw meat (13.3%), raw egg surface (10%) and unpasteurized milk (6.7%). The overall incidence of drug-resistant E.coli is 14.7% (Rasheed et al, Rev Inst MedTrop Sao Paulo, 56 (4): 341-346, 2014). The study further underscores the threat posed by the ability of drug resistant E.coli to transfer drug resistance genes to other species (e.g., Klebsiella).

There is increasing scientific evidence to suggest how bacteria develop a defense system to provide protection against the five broad classes of antibacterial drugs currently in use. These drugs are broadly classified into β -lactams, β -lactamase inhibitors, cephalosporins, quinolones, aminoglycosides, tetracyclines/glycylcyclines and polymyxins. The limitations of each agent, particularly when used individually, are summarized below.

Beta-lactams are a broad class of broad spectrum drugs that are the primary treatment for gram-negative infections. The subclasses of β -lactam drugs range from narrow spectrum (penicillins) to broad spectrum (carbapenems). Gram-negative bacteria have developed several pathways for beta-lactam resistance. Perhaps an alarming mechanism involves the evolution of beta-lactamases, which are enzymes that destroy beta-lactam antibiotics. Some beta-lactamase enzymes destroy a narrow spectrum of drugs (e.g., are active only on penicillins), while newer beta-lactamase enzymes (e.g., carbapenemases found in carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae or CRE) are capable of neutralizing all beta-lactam antibiotics.

Beta-lactamase inhibitors still have activity against gram-negative bacteria that have beta-lactamases with limited activity to destroy beta-lactam antibiotics. Bacteria resistant to the ultra-broad spectrum cephalosporins and carbapenems are also generally resistant to these drugs. The new β -lactamase inhibitor combination drugs under development have the potential to overcome some (but not all) resistance from the most potent β -lactamases (such as those found in CRE).

Over the last 20 years, the ultra-broad spectrum cephalosporins have been the basis for the treatment of severe gram-negative bacterial infections. Drug resistant gram-negative infections are spreading to communities. Drug resistance often makes carbapenems the only effective antibacterial agent.

Fluoroquinolones are broad spectrum antibiotics, which are usually administered orally, making them convenient for use in both hospitalized and outpatient settings. However, with increased use in patient populations, drug resistant strains rapidly evolve, rendering the drugs ineffective. Increased use is also associated with increased infection by drug resistant, hypervirulent strains of clostridium difficile.

Aminoglycosides are commonly used in combination with β -lactam drugs for the treatment of infections caused by gram-negative bacteria. Despite the increasing problem of resistance, these drugs remain an important therapeutic option as a last resort to combat serious infections. However, clinicians rarely, if ever, use them alone due to concerns about drug resistance and its long-term side effects.

Tetracycline is not the first line treatment of choice for severe gram-negative infections; however, due to the limited efficacy of other drug classes, they are considered as an option for the treatment of severe infections. Glycylcyclines (i.e., tigecycline) are generally considered for the treatment of multidrug resistant gram negative infections. Tigecycline is a drug that is not uniformly distributed in the body and is therefore often used in combination with other drugs depending on the site of infection. Although relatively uncommon, the development of strains resistant to tigecycline has been reported.

Polymyxins are undesirable older species due to toxicity problems. They are now frequently used as "last resort" agents for the treatment of multi-drug resistant gram-negative bacterial infections. Because these are pharmaceutical mimetics, contemporary data on dosimetry and efficacy are limited. In addition, there is some but limited data on the detection of highly resistant strains.

In view of the rapid increase in the number of drug-resistant bacterial strains, there is an urgent need for new and efficient methods for identifying and karyotyping clinical and non-clinical bacterial isolates, in particular those belonging to the ESKAPE group (enterococcus faecium, staphylococcus aureus, klebsiella pneumoniae, acinetobacter baumannii, pseudomonas aeruginosa and enterobacter). (Boucher et al, clinical Infections Diseases, 48: 1-12,2009). There is also a need for rapid and accurate pathogen identification to enable physicians to respond to and properly respond to infections, including those that may be life threatening. Currently, pathogen identification requires culturing on solid media (agar-based plates) followed by diagnostic assays that often require additional rounds of replication in culture or purification of specific bacterial products. At best, microbial identification takes many days, during which additional levels of biosafety may be required, depending on the overall classification of the pathogen. The second generation format of this biological, growth-based assay is by using radiometric measurements (e.g., BACTEC by Becton DickinsonTM) Or colorimetric/fluorometric assays (e.g., MGIT from Becton DickinsonTMAnd of Biomerieux) The device shortens the detection time of microorganism identification and resistance testing by measuring metabolites produced by growing bacteria rather than waiting for the bacterial population to reach a density sufficient to be seen by the naked eye. However, these analysis systems often face contamination problems, thus increasing the need for reprocessing and causing unnecessary delays (Totortoli et al, J.Clin.Microbiol., 40: 607- "610, 2002).

Recent approaches to accelerate the biological detection of drug resistant bacteria have focused on the use of bacteriophages to detect the effect of antimicrobial agents on isolates (Schofield et al, Bacteriophage, 2 (2): 105-. Bacteriophages are used to infect bacteria, hijack the cellular biosynthetic machinery of the host for replication, and thus as a tool to identify the presence of specific bacterial strains in clinical specimens. Various methods can be employed in phage detection. One method relies on the use of nucleic acid amplification (U.S. patent publication Nos. 2014-0256664 and WO 12/158502). In this method, drug sensitivity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is screened by analyzing real-time PCR products of Mycobacterium phage D29 DNA.

Related methods rely on infecting a secondary culture with a phage-bearing bacterium and analyzing the secondary culture for growth characteristics. This method is commonly used to identify drug resistant mycobacterium tuberculosis. An exemplary commercial kit based on this indirect detection method is sold under the trademark FASTPLAQUE-RESPONSE by Biotec, Inc. (Suffolk, UK)TMSold (Mobile et al, J MedMicrobiol., 56(Pt 10): 1334-. The kit also provides mycobacterial phage D29, however, in contrast to direct PCR analysis of D29 DNA, this approach attempts to minimize false positives by eliminating phage that do not infect bacteria through the use of virucides. After screening for infected mycobacteria, phage-infected mycobacterium tuberculosis was mixed with rapidly replicating mycobacterium smegmatis, and then the mixture was inoculated on an agar plate. The assay system is based on the following principle: m. smegmatis was effectively cross-infected with D29 and formed clear and visible plaques on M.smegmatis bacterial lawn, such that each plaque represented M.tuberculosis cells originally infected with D29. Thus, the assay quantitatively measures D29 replication in small mycobacterium tuberculosis pools. While an accurate and rapid test, this assay is too complex and difficult to use in resource-poor environments, as analysis of viral growth by plaque formation on agar plates must be performed in the laboratory by trained technicians. Furthermore, the number of secondary fast growing bacteria available for use in the assay is limited, and the assay cannot be customized or modified to screen large numbers of bacteriaThe target bacterial species.

Similarly, variants of the original Luciferase Reporter Assay (LRA), for example using the engineered mycobacterial phage TM4, are also limited in detection sensitivity. See, Piuri et al, PLoS One, 2009; 4(3): e4870, wherein fluorescent phages (fluorophages) (mycobacterium fluorophages) can detect only 50% of the mycobacterium tuberculosis cells 16 hours after infection. Moreover, because the assay involves the detection of fluorescent or luminescent markers expressed in a small sample, the assay is limited in the types of samples that can be analyzed.

In summary, current methods for identifying drug-resistant bacteria do not address the need for today's efficient and effective means of phenotyping a wide variety of bacteria (including mixtures thereof), e.g., based on the type of resistance they possess. There is therefore an urgent need for an assay system which can be used to screen for the susceptibility of particular bacterial strains to antibacterial agents. This analytical technique can be effectively combined with the diagnosis, treatment and control of many human and veterinary diseases (e.g. cholera, meningitis, pneumonia, etc.). These systems and assays can also be used to screen for beneficial agents (probiotics) that can be used to supplement the growth of industrially useful microorganisms (e.g., E.coli, Ralstonia eutropha, Staphylococcus carnosus, etc.).

Disclosure of Invention

It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide methods and devices for selective microbial (e.g. bacterial) detection that are less costly, more efficient, more specific, faster, more accessible and more adaptable than the currently available technologies provide. Thus, a method for determining the resistance of bacteria to antibiotics and for the identification of microbial species is provided. This approach takes advantage of the inherent specificity of bacteriophages for their respective host bacteria. In one embodiment, a method is provided for identifying a bacterial species causing an infection and simultaneously determining the susceptibility of the identified bacteria to an antimicrobial or antibiotic agent.

In light of the foregoing, embodiments provide recombinant bacteriophages, methods for constructing and producing such recombinant bacteriophages, and methods of using such recombinant bacteriophages to detect a target bacterium and/or to determine a drug or antibiotic to which the target bacterium is resistant. The compositions and methods may also be adapted to screen for new beneficial agents that can be used to biosynthesize enzymes, hormones, antibodies, nucleic acids, sugars and other biomolecules at the laboratory level or on an industrial scale.

According to one embodiment, products, kits and methods are capable of detecting specific types of bacteria, for example, by detecting the presence of specific molecules (e.g., markers, such as proteins) in targeted live bacteria. Once drug resistant strains are identified, the method can be used, for example, in conjunction with other techniques to identify the molecular basis of drug resistance mechanisms, such as gene mutation, gene replication, transformation, antibiotic degradation, and the like. This is currently achieved using recombinant phages containing genes for heterologous peptide/protein markers that can be detected by immunoassay.

In one embodiment, a method for identifying a bacterial species in a sample is provided. The method includes culturing or incubating a sample or an aliquot of the sample with a bacteriophage transformed to express a heterologous protein marker to form a transformed culture, and determining the presence or absence of the heterologous protein marker in the transformed culture. The presence of the marker indicates the presence of the bacterial species. In one embodiment, the assay is performed using a lateral flow immunoassay.

In one embodiment, the bacteriophage is selected from the group consisting of lytic, lysogenic, and filamentous bacteriophage.

In another embodiment, the lytic bacteriophage is selected from the group consisting of T4, T7, T3, and MS 2.

In another embodiment, the lysogenic bacteriophage is a lambda bacteriophage.

In another embodiment, the filamentous bacteriophage is selected from the group consisting of fl, fd, and M13.

In another embodiment, the marker may be expressed as a nucleic acid or protein in bacteria.

In another embodiment, the marker may be expressed as a polypeptide selected from the group consisting of an antigen, an enzyme, an antibody or fragment thereof, and an aptamer, or a combination thereof.

In another embodiment, the protein marker comprises a detectable label.

In another embodiment, the protein marker or detectable label on the marker is detected using an assay selected from the group consisting of fluorescence assays, chemiluminescence assays, enzyme assays, gel electrophoresis, immunoassays, and ligand binding assays.

In another embodiment, the detectable label on the protein marker is detected using a lateral flow immunoassay.

In another embodiment, the incubating further comprises incubating in the presence of an antimicrobial agent, wherein expression of the heterologous protein marker indicates bacterial resistance to the antimicrobial agent.

In another aspect, methods are provided for simultaneously identifying a bacterial species in a sample and determining its susceptibility to an antimicrobial agent. The method comprises (a) culturing a sample or aliquot of the sample in the presence of an antimicrobial agent to produce a primary culture; (b) culturing the primary culture with a transformed bacteriophage specific to the bacterial species and engineered to express the heterologous marker; and (c) detecting the presence or absence of a marker, wherein the presence of a marker is indicative of the presence of the bacterial species in the sample and its resistance to the antimicrobial agent.

In another aspect, a method is provided for simultaneously identifying a bacterial species in a sample and determining its susceptibility to an antimicrobial agent. The method comprises (a) incubating an aliquot of a sample with or without an antimicrobial agent to produce a set of primary cultures; (b) culturing a portion of the set of primary cultures with or without transformed phage specific for a bacterial species and engineered to express a heterologous marker, thereby producing a plurality of transformed secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria cultured with an antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria not cultured with an antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the presence or absence of a heterologous marker, wherein the presence of the marker is indicative of the presence of a bacterial species in the sample and its resistance to the antimicrobial agent.

In yet another aspect, a method for determining the susceptibility of a bacterium to a test antimicrobial agent is provided. The method comprises (a) culturing the bacteria in the presence and absence of the antimicrobial agent to produce a primary culture; (b) culturing the primary culture in the presence and absence of a transforming bacteriophage specific for the bacteria and comprising a marker, thereby producing a plurality of transformed secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with a test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with the antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, thereby determining the susceptibility of the bacterium to an antimicrobial agent.

In one embodiment, a method for determining the susceptibility of a bacterium to a test antimicrobial agent is provided, wherein the method comprises (a) culturing the bacterium in the presence or absence of the antimicrobial agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence and absence of a transforming bacteriophage specific for the bacteria and comprising a marker, thereby producing a plurality of transformed secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with the test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with the antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, thereby determining the susceptibility of the bacterium to the antimicrobial agent. In this case, steps (a), (b) and (c) may be performed sequentially or non-sequentially. In a particular embodiment, steps (a), (b) and (c) are performed sequentially.

In related embodiments, methods for determining the susceptibility of a bacterium to a test antimicrobial agent are provided. The method comprises (a) culturing the bacteria in the presence and absence of the antimicrobial agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transformed bacteriophage specific for the bacteria and comprising a marker, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with a test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with an antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, wherein a decrease in the level or activity of the marker in the first transformed secondary culture as compared to the level or activity of the marker in the second transformed secondary culture (the control) indicates that the bacterium is susceptible to the test antimicrobial.

In another related embodiment, a method for determining the susceptibility of a bacterium to a test antimicrobial agent is provided. The method comprises (a) culturing the bacteria in the presence and/or absence of the antimicrobial agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transforming bacteriophage specific for the bacteria and comprising a marker, thereby producing a plurality of transformed secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with a test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with an antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, wherein a coincidence (e.g., no change) or an increase in the level or activity of the marker in the first transformed secondary culture as compared to the level or activity of the marker in the second transformed secondary culture (control) indicates that the bacterium is not susceptible to or resistant to the test antimicrobial.

In another embodiment, a method for determining the probiotic effect of a test agent on bacteria is provided. The method comprises (a) culturing bacteria in the presence and/or absence of the test agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transforming bacteriophage specific for the bacteria and comprising a marker, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with a test agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with the test agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, wherein an increase in the level or activity of the marker in the first transformed secondary culture compared to the level or activity of the marker in the second transformed secondary culture (control) indicates that the test agent has a probiotic effect.

In another embodiment, a method for determining the susceptibility of a gram positive or gram negative bacterium to a test antimicrobial is provided. The method comprises (a) culturing gram-positive or gram-negative bacteria in the presence and/or absence of an antimicrobial agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transformed bacteriophage that is specific for a gram-positive or gram-negative bacterium and comprises a marker, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed gram-positive or gram-negative bacteria that have been treated with a test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed gram-positive or gram-negative bacteria that have not been treated with an antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, thereby determining the susceptibility of the gram-positive or gram-negative bacteria to the antimicrobial agent.

In one embodiment, the bacterium is selected from the group consisting of Acinetobacter baumannii (Acinetobacter baumannii), Bacillus anthracis (Bacillus antrhricus), Bacillus cereus (Bacillus cereus), Bordetella pertussis (Bordetella pertussis), Bordetella burgdorferi (Bordetella burgdorferi), Brucella abortus (Brucella abortus), Brucella canis (Brucella canis), Brucella melitensis (Brucella melitensis), Brucella suis (Brucella suis), Campylobacter jejuni (Campylobacter jejuni), Chlamydia pneumoniae (Chlamydia pneuloniae), Chlamydia psittaci (Chlamydia psittaci), Chlamydia trachomatis (Chlamydia trachomatis), Clostridium botulinum (Clostridium botulinum borteobacillus), Clostridium difficile (Clostridium difficile), Clostridium difficile (Clostridium perfringens), Clostridium histolyticum, Clostridium perfringens (Clostridium), Clostridium gordonii (Clostridium perfringens), Clostridium gordonovariens (Clostridium gordonii), Clostridium gordonia farinocelia farinosus), Clostridium gordonii (Clostridium gordonii), Clostridium gordonii (Clostridium gordonii), Clostridium gordonii (Clostridium gordon, Enterococcus faecium (Enterococcus faecalis), Escherichia coli (Escherichia coli), enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC), enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (Enterobacter Escherichia coli), Escherichia coli O157: 'H7 (E.coli O157:' H7), Francisella tularensis (Francisela tularensis), Haemophilus influenzae (Haemophilus influenzae), Helicobacter pylori (Helicobacter pylori), Klebsiella pneumoniae (Klebsiella pneumoniae), Legionella pneumophila (Legiobacter pneumophila), Leptospira interrogans (Leptospira interrogans), Listeria monocytogenes (Listeria monocytogenes), Neisseria meningitidis (Neisseria meningitidis), Salmonella typhimurium (Salmonella typhimurium), Salmonella typhi (Salmonella typhi), Salmonella typhi, and Salmonella typhi, Salmonella typhimurium (Salmonella typhimurium), Shigella sonnei (Shigella sonnei), Staphylococcus aureus (Staphylococcus aureus), Staphylococcus epidermidis (Staphylococcus epidermidis), Staphylococcus saprophyticus (Staphylococcus saprophyticus), methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VSA), Streptococcus agalactiae (Streptococcus agalactiae), Streptococcus pneumoniae (Streptococcus pneumoniae), Streptococcus pyogenes (Streptococcus pyggensis), Treponema pallidum (Treponema pallidum), Vibrio cholerae (Vibrio cholerae) and Yersinia pestis (Yersinia pestis).

In another embodiment, the bacterium is selected from the group consisting of Enterococcus (Enterococcus sp.), Escherichia (Escherichia sp.), Staphylococcus (Staphylococcus sp.), Klebsiella (Klebsiella sp.), Acinetobacter (Acinetobacter sp.), Pseudomonas (Pseudomonas sp.), and Enterobacter (Enterobacter sp.).

In another embodiment, there is provided a method for determining the susceptibility of a bacterium listed in any of tables 1-3 to a test antimicrobial agent, the method comprising (a) culturing a bacterium listed in any of tables 1-3 in the presence or absence of an antimicrobial agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transformed bacteriophage as set forth in any one of tables 1-3, wherein the bacteriophage is specific for the bacterium and comprises a sequence for expressing a heterologous marker, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with a test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with an antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the respective marker of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, thereby determining the susceptibility of the bacterium to the antimicrobial agent. In this embodiment, the bacteria may be selected from the group consisting of Bacillus anthracis (Bacillus anthracris), Bacillus subtilis (Bacillus subtilis), Bacillus thuringiensis (Bacillus thuringiensis), escherichia coli, Lactobacillus delbrueckii (Lactobacillus delbrueckii), Lactobacillus plantarum (Lactobacillus plantarum), Lactococcus lactis (Lactobacillus lactis), listeria monocytogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Pseudomonas syringae (Pseudomonas syringa syringae), Klebsiella (Klebsiella), Salmonella (Salmonella), Shigella (Shigella) and staphylococcus aureus.

In another embodiment, a method for determining the susceptibility of a bacterium to a test antimicrobial agent is provided. The method comprises (a) culturing the bacteria in the presence and/or absence of the antimicrobial agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of transforming recombinant or engineered phage that are specific for bacteria and that comprise a heterologous marker, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with a test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with an antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the respective marker of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, thereby determining the susceptibility of the bacterium to the antimicrobial agent.

In one embodiment, the recombinant or engineered phage may be selected from the group consisting of (a) lytic or proliferative phage; (b) a warm or lysogenic bacteriophage and (c) a filamentous bacteriophage.

In a specific embodiment, the recombinant or engineered bacteriophage is a lytic or proliferative bacteriophage selected from the group consisting of T4, T7, T3, and MS 2. In a second embodiment, the recombinant or engineered bacteriophage is a temperate or lysogenic lambda bacteriophage. In a third embodiment, the recombinant or engineered bacteriophage is a filamentous bacteriophage selected from the group consisting of fl, fd, and M13. The method can be performed using a combination of various bacteriophages.

In another embodiment, a method of determining the susceptibility of a bacterium to a test antimicrobial agent is provided. The method comprises (a) culturing the bacteria in the presence and/or absence of the antimicrobial agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transforming bacteriophage specific for the bacterium and comprising a marker that is expressible in the bacterial cell as a nucleic acid or polypeptide product, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with a test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with an antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the respective marker of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, thereby determining the susceptibility of the bacterium to the antimicrobial agent. In particular embodiments, the marker may be expressed as a polypeptide selected from the group consisting of an antigen, an enzyme, an antibody or fragment thereof, and an aptamer, or a combination thereof.

In some embodiments, the expressed polypeptide marker may comprise a detectable label. In other embodiments, the polypeptide marker can be detected using an assay selected from the group consisting of fluorescence analysis, chemiluminescence analysis, enzymatic analysis, gel electrophoresis, immunoassay, ligand binding analysis, chromatography, spectroscopy, or a combination thereof. In particular, the expressed polypeptide markers are detected using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) or lateral flow immunoassay. In certain embodiments, the method may further comprise verifying the detection result by detecting a second marker that is a nucleic acid selected from the group consisting of DNA, RNA, or a combination thereof. In such embodiments where the initial detection is validated, the second nucleic acid marker can be detected using gel electrophoresis, a nucleic acid amplification technique such as Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), or a combination thereof.

In another embodiment, a method for determining the susceptibility of a bacterium to a test antimicrobial agent is provided, comprising (a) culturing the bacterium in the presence or absence of the antimicrobial agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transforming bacteriophage specific for the bacterium and comprising a nucleic acid encoding a heterologous protein that is (1) an antigen that specifically binds to the antibody or (2) an enzyme that catalyzes a reaction, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with a test antimicrobial agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with an antimicrobial agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the respective marker of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, thereby determining the susceptibility of the bacterium to the antimicrobial agent. Under this embodiment, wherein the heterologous protein is (1) an antigen that specifically binds to an antibody, the detecting step comprises detecting the level of the protein using an immunoassay. Still under this embodiment, wherein the heterologous protein is (2) an enzyme that catalyzes a reaction, the detecting step comprises detecting the activity of the protein using an enzyme assay.

In a related embodiment, a method for screening a test agent for antibacterial activity against a sample of target bacteria is provided, comprising (a) culturing the target bacteria in the presence or absence of the test agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transforming bacteriophage specific to the bacterium and comprising a marker, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with a test agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with the test agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the first and second transformation sub-cultures, wherein a decrease in the level or activity of the marker in the first transformation sub-culture compared to the level or activity of the marker in the second transformation sub-culture (control) is indicative of the test agent having antibacterial activity.

Another embodiment is a method for determining the presence or absence of an antibiotic agent in a food sample, comprising (a) culturing the food sample in a plurality of bacterial cultures, wherein a first culture comprises bacteria that are sensitive to an antibiotic and a second culture comprises bacteria that are resistant to the antibiotic, thereby producing a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transforming bacteriophage specific to the bacterium and comprising a marker, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein a first transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria sensitive to an antibiotic agent and a second transformed secondary culture comprises transformed bacteria resistant to the antibiotic agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the first and second transformed secondary cultures, wherein a decrease in the level or activity of the marker in the first transformed secondary culture compared to the level or activity of the marker in the second transformed secondary culture (control) indicates that the food sample comprises an antibiotic agent. In this embodiment, the susceptible and resistant bacteria belong to the same strain. Furthermore, the resistant bacteria may be a mutant variant of a susceptible bacterium comprising a recombinant gene conferring resistance to an antibacterial agent.

Another embodiment relates to a method for determining the Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) of an antibacterial agent for a target bacterial sample, comprising (a) culturing a target bacterium in the presence or absence of different concentrations of an antibacterial agent to produce a plurality of primary cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence or absence of a transformed bacteriophage specific to the bacteria and comprising a marker, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures, wherein the experimental group comprises transformed bacteria that have been treated with various concentrations of an antibacterial agent and the control group comprises transformed bacteria that have not been treated with a test agent; and (c) detecting the level or activity of the marker in each of the experimental group and the control group, wherein the minimum concentration of the antibacterial agent that is capable of reducing the level or activity of the marker compared to a threshold level or activity in the control group is indicative of the MIC. In a related embodiment, a method is provided for determining the additive, superadditive, synergistic, or antagonistic activity of two or more antibacterial agents, the method comprising determining the Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) for each antibacterial agent as described above and determining the inhibitory effect of a combination of each agent comprising the minimum inhibitory concentration as described above; comparing the inhibition of the combination with the inhibition of a single agent to determine the additive, superadditive, synergistic or antagonistic activity of two or more antibacterial agents.

Yet another embodiment relates to a method of diagnosing and treating a bacterial disease in a subject in need thereof, comprising (a) culturing a plurality of subject samples comprising bacteria to produce a plurality of primary bacterial cultures; (b) culturing the primary culture of (a) in the presence of a plurality of transforming bacteriophages, wherein each transforming bacteriophage is specific for a bacterium and comprises a nucleic acid encoding a unique polypeptide marker, thereby producing a plurality of secondary cultures; (c) detecting the unique polypeptide markers in the secondary culture by immunoassay; (d) correlating the detection of the marker with the bacteria; (e) correlating the presence of bacteria with a bacterial disease; and (f) optionally administering to the subject an antibiotic agent specific for the detected bacteria, thereby treating the bacterial disease.

Drawings

The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings/tables and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the drawings/tables and detailed description, and from the claims.

FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary workflow according to one embodiment of the methods described herein; and

fig. 2 shows an exemplary workflow according to another embodiment of the method described herein.

Detailed Description

Embodiments described herein provide methods and assays for diagnosing or detecting bacterial infection agents and diseases using recombinant bacteriophages. The method is suitable for detecting bacterial infectious agents and for determining drug resistance of these infectious agents. In addition, the method is useful for providing information about the susceptibility of an infectious agent to an antimicrobial agent.

A. Infectious bacterium

Essentially any bacteria can be detected, and the methods and compositions can be used to determine antibiotic sensitivity of the bacteria or to screen candidate antibiotic agents that exert a desired (e.g., antimicrobial or cytotoxic) effect on the target bacteria.

In one embodiment, the bacterium is a gram-negative bacterium. Typical gram-negative bacteria include proteobacteria such as E.coli, Salmonella, Pseudomonas and helicobacter, and cyanobacteria. When classified in combination with drugs, they include Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Haemophilus influenzae, which cause respiratory disorders, Escherichia coli and Proteus mirabilis (Proteus mirabilis), which cause urinary disorders, and helicobacter pylori and Bordetella (Bacillus Gaertner), which cause digestive disorders, and micrococcals such as Neisseria meningitidis, Moraxella catarrhalis (Moraxella catarrhalis), and Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

In another embodiment, the bacterium is a gram-positive bacterium. "gram-positive bacterium" refers to one or more bacteria containing teichoic acid (e.g., lipoteichoic acid and/or teichoic acid) or functionally equivalent carbohydrate-containing polymers (e.g., rhamnopolysaccharides, uronophosphoric acid, arabinogalactans, lipomannans, and lipoarabinomannans) in their cell wall. Non-limiting examples of functionally equivalent saccharide-containing polymers are described in Weidenmaier et al, Nature, 6: 276- "287,2008". Other examples of functionally equivalent saccharide-containing polymers are known in the art. In some embodiments, gram-positive bacteria are identified using gram-staining methods (e.g., typically comprising the steps of staining with crystal violet, treating with an iodine solution, decolorizing with alcohol, and counterstaining with safranin, wherein the gram-positive bacteria retain the purple stain). Non-limiting examples of gram-positive bacteria are described herein. Other examples of gram-positive bacteria are known in the art. Described herein are exemplary methods for detecting or identifying gram-positive bacteria. Other methods for detecting or identifying gram-positive bacteria are known in the art.

Target bacteria include pathogenic bacteria that infect mammalian hosts (e.g., bovine, murine, equine, primate, feline, canine, and human hosts). In one embodiment, the bacterium infects and/or causes a disease in a human host. Examples of such pathogenic bacteria include members of bacterial species such as Bacteroides (Bacteroides), Clostridium (Clostridium), Streptococcus (Streptococcus), Staphylococcus (Staphylococcus), Pseudomonas (Pseudomonas), Haemophilus (Haemophilus), Legionella (Legionella), Mycobacterium (mycobactium), Escherichia (Escherichia), Salmonella (Salmonella), Shigella (Shigella), Vibrio (Vibrio) or Listeria (Listeria). Some clinically relevant examples of pathogenic bacteria that cause disease in a human host include, but are not limited to, Bacillus anthracis, Bacillus cereus, Bordetella pertussis, Borrelia burgdorferi, Brucella abortus, Brucella canis, Brucella ovis, Brucella suis, Campylobacter jejuni, Chlamydia pneumoniae, Chlamydia psittaci, Chlamydia trachomatis, Clostridium botulinum, Clostridium difficile, Clostridium perfringens, Clostridium tetani, Corynebacterium diphtheriae, enterococcus faecalis, vancomycin-resistant enterococcus faecalis, enterococcus faecium, Escherichia coli, enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC), enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, Escherichia coli 0157: H7, Francisella tularensis, Haemophilus influenzae, helicobacter pylori, Legionella pneumophila, Leptospira interrogans, Listeria monocytogenes, Mycobacterium leprae, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Bacillus cereus, Bordeteroliferae, mycoplasma pneumoniae, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Neisseria meningitidis, Proteus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Rickettsia rickettsii, Salmonella typhimurium, Shigella sonnei, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Staphylococcus saprophyticus, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VSA), Streptococcus agalactiae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus pyogenes, Treponema pallidum, Vibrio cholerae, and Yersinia pestis.

In another embodiment, the infecting bacterium is selected from the group consisting of Clostridium difficile, carbapenemases-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CR-Klebsiella spp; CR-E.coli) and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. In another embodiment, the infectious bacterium is selected from the group consisting of multi-drug resistant acinetobacter, drug resistant campylobacter, extended spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL) producing enterobacteriaceae, vancomycin resistant enterococci, multi-drug resistant pseudomonas aeruginosa, drug resistant non-salmonella typhi, drug resistant salmonella enterica typhi serotype, drug resistant shigella, Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA), drug resistant streptococcus pneumoniae, and drug resistant tubercle bacillus. In another embodiment, the infectious bacterium is selected from the group consisting of vancomycin-resistant staphylococcus aureus, erythromycin-resistant group a streptococcus, and clindamycin-resistant group B streptococcus.

In certain embodiments, the infectious agent is naturally present in the host subject. In another embodiment, the infectious agent is an invasive species that is foreign to the host subject. Preferably, the host is a mammal, e.g., a rodent, a human, a livestock, a companion animal, or a non-domesticated or wild animal. In one embodiment, the subject can be a rodent, e.g., a mouse, rat, guinea pig, or the like. In another embodiment, the subject may be livestock. Non-limiting examples of suitable livestock may include pigs, cattle, horses, goats, sheep, llamas, and alpacas. In yet another embodiment, the subject may be a companion animal. Non-limiting examples of companion animals can include pets such as dogs, cats, rabbits, and birds. In yet another embodiment, the subject may be a zoo animal. As used herein, "zoo animal" refers to an animal that can be found in a zoo. These animals may include non-human primates, large cats, wolves, and bears. In an exemplary embodiment, the subject is a human.

The method can be used to analyze infectious agents contained in a variety of samples including, for example, biological samples, research test samples, environmental samples (e.g., water samples, including water samples selected from natural water bodies, ponds, community reservoirs, recreational water bodies, swimming pools, whirlpools, hot water baths, hydrotherapy centers, water parks, natural freshwater and ocean surface water bodies), and industrial samples (e.g., fermentation inoculants (e.g., lactic acid bacteria), chemical reagents, culture media, cleaning fluids).

Preferably, the sample is a biological sample comprising a bodily fluid, such as sputum, tears, saliva, sweat, mucus, serum, semen, urine, stool, vomit, and blood. Samples may include, for example, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), plasma, serum, lymph, lung lavage, pleural fluid, and the like. In some embodiments, the sample can be obtained from the subject using any known device or method, e.g., a swab, urethral catheter, aspirator, hypodermic needle, fine needle biopsy, hollow needle biopsy, punch biopsy, metabolic cage, and syringe.

In some embodiments, the biological sample is processed for use in the methods described herein. By way of non-limiting example, sputum or Airway Surface Fluid (ASF) is collected in a suitable container, such as a sterile sample vial. The sample is dissolved, for example, to a final concentration of about 60% using acetonitrile, to a final concentration of about 0.1% using trifluoroacetic acid, or using N-acetylcysteine.

In certain embodiments, a biological sample can be manipulated to culture bacteria contained therein. The term "culture" refers to cultured cells, culture supernatant, mixtures thereof, or culture filtrate (if a liquid medium is used); if a solid medium is used, the term "culture" refers to a mixture of cells and the medium on which they are grown. For example, if a liquid medium is used, the marker can be recovered from the culture mixture by the following procedure. When complete growth of the bacteria is achieved, the culture mixture is subjected to antibiotic and/or phage treatment. Such downstream processing may be inserted into one or more washing and/or separation steps comprising centrifugation or filtration to obtain a crude bacterial preparation free of contaminants. The marker may be detected or analyzed at the cellular level (e.g., in situ) or after subjecting the culture to further processing. For example, where the markers are proteins or DNA in the cytosol, they may be extracted by disrupting the cells using a suitable method, such as milling or sonication. The cells may be directly sonicated in the culture medium to disrupt the cells, and the crude enzyme solution may be obtained by removing any insoluble material from the treated solution.

If the culture is performed on a solid medium, the marker can be analyzed by first manipulating the culture using the following procedure: water is added to the solid medium containing the cultured cells and any insoluble material is removed from the mixture either immediately or after the cells are disrupted by a suitable method such as sonication. The crude marker preparation may be isolated from the crude lysate by conventional purification techniques, such as organic solvent fractionation, ammonium sulfate fractionation, dialysis, isoelectric precipitation and column chromatography, which may be used alone or in combination. The level or activity of a marker can be determined using conventional methods, such as immunoassays for antigenic protein markers, ligand binding for antibody-like markers, enzymatic assays for enzyme-like markers, nucleic acid hybridization, and/or nucleic acid amplification, and the like.

Depending on the purpose, the cell culture can be analyzed using conventional techniques. For example, bacteria can be cultured to log phase (MSSA USA300 and MRSA USA300) and the peak log phase of the phage can be detected using conventional techniques such as spectrophotometry. The use of log phase bacteria may be preferred because they are more likely to be adherent due to higher expression of adhesins, and their peptidoglycan layer may be less cross-linked and thick and the cells have higher metabolic activity compared to stationary phase cells, thus responding to damage more quickly. However, the optimum conditions may vary from strain to strain. Since different strains are often encountered in a clinical setting, this information is important for assessing the utility of diagnostic methods. Although strain variability is contemplated herein, it is expected that the performance of the bacteria is similar enough to allow testing of all strains using a single protocol. This expectation is based on the fact that: the bacterial families (e.g., staphylococci) are genetically very similar to each other and therefore have similar cellular structures, which will be the main component of their responsiveness to specific bacteriophages.

In some embodiments, the methods and compositions can be used to determine the susceptibility of a microorganism, such as a bacterium. As used herein, the term "susceptibility" refers to the degree to which a bacterial cell is affected by an antibiotic. That is, the cell may not be affected at all, it may slow or stop its growth and proliferation without being killed, or it may be killed. Susceptibility also refers to the degree to which a population of bacterial species or strains is affected by an antibiotic. In this case, certain highly susceptible cells of the population may be very sensitive and may be killed by very low concentrations of antibiotics, other less sensitive cells may slow their growth and proliferation, while others may not be affected at all.

In related embodiments, the methods and compositions can be used to identify resistance of a microorganism, such as a bacterium, to an antimicrobial agent or antibiotic. The term "resistance to antibiotics" as used herein means that a particular bacterial strain (typically a mutant strain) is not killed, or is killed significantly more slowly than the corresponding wild-type strain from which it was derived. Resistance can also be reflected by mutations and altered growth characteristics of the wild type strain. For example, a low concentration of antibiotic in the culture medium prevents or significantly reduces the growth of the wild-type strain while the growth of the mutant strain is unaffected. The phenotype of the resistant strain, e.g., altered growth, cell division, metabolism, biofilm production, virulence, etc., can be determined using conventional techniques, e.g., growing the wild-type and mutant strains under the same conditions to assess changes in the measured parameters. Sensitive strains can be used as reference standards for resistance assessment (positive controls).

In one embodiment, the method is performed by culturing the bacterial sample in the presence and absence of an antibiotic. The medium or fermentation medium can be changed or adjusted to meet the needs of the respective strain. A description of the media used for the various microorganisms is found in the American society for bacteria "Manual of Methods for General Bacteriology" (Washington D.C., USA, 1981). The terms medium and fermentation medium or culture medium are interchangeable.

In its simplest sense, the medium contains at least one carbon source (e.g.glucose) and at least one nitrogen source (e.g.nitrate), optionally also a phosphorus source, such as phosphoric acid, potassium phosphate or other phosphates. Preferably, the medium is buffered for bacterial growth. The culture medium may additionally comprise salts, such as chlorides or sulfates of metals (e.g., sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium and iron), such as magnesium sulfate or iron sulfate, which promote growth and/or metabolic activity. Finally, if desired, essential growth factors, such as amino acids, for example homoserine, and vitamins, for example thiamine, biotin or pantothenic acid, can be added to the culture medium. See U.S. patent No.9,074,229.

The starting sample containing the bacteria is added to the culture in the form of a single batch or is fed in a suitable manner during the culture, for example every 2to 4 hours or every 1to 3 hours, or every 1,2, 3 or 4 hours.

The pH of the culture can be controlled by using basic compounds such as sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, ammonia or aqueous ammonia or acidic compounds such as phosphoric acid or sulfuric acid in a suitable manner. The pH is usually adjusted to 6.0 to 8.5, preferably 6.5 to 8. To control foaming, defoamers, such as polyethylene glycol fatty acid esters, may be used. In order to maintain the stability of the bacteria, it is possible to add suitable selective substances, for example inducers such as IPTG, to the culture medium. The fermentation is preferably carried out under aerobic conditions. To maintain these conditions, oxygen or an oxygen-containing gaseous mixture (e.g., air) is introduced into the culture. In a batch or fed-batch process, the cultivation is preferably continued until the desired density of the microorganisms is reached. Detection is carried out spectrophotometrically (absorption, fluorescence). This goal is usually accomplished in2 hours to 160 hours. In a continuous process, longer incubation times are possible. The activity of the microorganism results in the concentration (accumulation) of various markers in the fermentation medium and/or in the microbial cells.

Examples of suitable fermentation media can be found in, inter alia, U.S. Pat. nos. 5,770,409, 5,275,940, 5,827,698, 5,756,345; and WO 2007/012078 and WO 2009/043803.

B. Antibiotic

The above medium may be supplemented with or without antibiotics. As used herein, the term "antibiotic" or "antimicrobial agent" refers to a substance that inhibits the growth of or destroys microorganisms. Preferably, antibiotics are used to control the virulence of the infectious agent and/or to treat infectious diseases. Antibiotics also refer to semi-synthetic substances in which the natural form produced by a microorganism, such as a yeast or fungus, is subsequently structurally modified.

In another embodiment, the culture medium may or may not be supplemented with a beneficial bacterial substance. As used herein, the term "probiotic" refers to a substance that promotes the growth or metabolic activity of a microorganism, for example, a micronutrient, a growth-inducing substance, or a toxin-removing substance.

Preferably, the antibiotic is selected from the group consisting of beta-lactams (including beta-lactamase inhibitors and cephalosporins), fluoroquinolones, aminoglycosides, tetracyclines and/or glycylcyclines and/or polymyxins. Any combination of antimicrobial agents may also be tested, for example, at least one beta-lactam and at least one fluoroquinolone; at least one aminoglycoside and one cephalosporin; at least one beta-lactam and one beta-lactamase inhibitor, optionally together with an aminoglycoside, etc.

As used herein, the term "beta-lactam" refers to any antibiotic agent that contains a beta-lactam ring in its molecular structure. Representative examples include natural and semi-synthetic penicillins and penicillin derivatives, clavulanic acid, carbapenems, cephalosporins and monobactal rings. These drugs are metabolized by enzymes widely known as "beta-lactamases". Beta-lactamases are classified into four molecular classes (A, B, C and D). Class a enzymes preferentially hydrolyze penicillins; class B enzymes include metalloenzymes with a broader substrate spectrum than other enzymes; class C enzymes are responsible for the resistance of gram-negative bacteria to various antibiotics; and class D enzymes are serine hydrolases, which exhibit a unique substrate profile.

In general, β -lactams are classified and grouped according to their core ring structure, where each group can be divided into different classes. The term "penem (pentam)" is used to describe the core backbone of members of penicillin antibiotics, such as β -lactams containing thiazolidine rings. Penicillins may include narrow spectrum penicillins, such as benzathine, benzylpenicillin (penicillin G), phenoxymethylpenicillin (penicillin V), procaine and oxacillin. Penicillin-resistant penicillins with a narrow spectrum of resistance to penicillinase, such as methicillin, dicloxacillin and flucloxacillin. The narrow spectrum beta-lactamase resistant penicillin may comprise temocillin. Medium spectrum penicillins include, for example, amoxicillin and ampicillin. Broad spectrum penicillins include amoxicillin (amoxicillin + clavulanic acid). Finally, the penicillin group also includes ultra broad spectrum penicillins, such as azlocillin, carbenicillin, ticarcillin, mezlocillin, and piperacillin. Synthetic penicillin derivatives include, for example, faropenem.

Beta-lactams containing a pyrrolidine ring are known as carbapenans (carbapenams). The carbapenem group comprises: biapenem, doripenem, ertapenem, imipenem, meropenem, panipenem and PZ-601.

Cephalosporins and cephalosporins include cephalexin, cephalothin, cefazolin, cefaclor, cefuroxime, cefamandole, cefotetan, cefoxitin, cefotaxime and cefpodoxime. Fourth generation cephalosporins active against gram positive bacteria include cefepime and cefpirome. Cephalosporins may further include: cefadroxil, cefixime, cefprozil, cefalexin, cephalothin, cefuroxime, cefamandole, cefepime and cefpirome. Cephamycins include, for example, cefoxitin, cefotetan, cefmetazole and flomoxef.

An example of a carbacephem is chlorocephem. The monobactal ring active against gram-negative bacteria includes, for example, tegromonan, nocardicin a and pyrophyllotoxin. Synthetic cephems include, for example, clavulanic acid and oxycephalosporanes such as moxalactam and flomoxef.

Fluoroquinolones act by inhibiting enzymes essential for bacterial DNA replication. Representative examples thereof include ciprofloxacin, gatifloxacin, gemifloxacin, levofloxacin and moxifloxacin.

Aminoglycosides have bactericidal activity against most gram-negative aerobic and facultative anaerobic bacilli. Representative examples include, for example, kanamycin, amikacin, tobramycin, dibekacin, gentamicin, sisomicin, netilmicin, neomycin B, neomycin C, neomycin E (paromomycin), and streptomycin, including the synthetic derivatives clarithromycin and azithromycin.

Tetracyclines are a subset of polyketides with an octahydrotetracene-2-carboxamide skeleton. They may be naturally occurring (e.g., tetracycline, chlortetracycline, oxytetracycline, demeclocycline) or semi-synthetic (e.g., lymecycline, meclocycline, methacycline, minocycline, rolicycline). Glycylcyclines (e.g., minocycline/tigecycline) are derived from tetracyclines.

Polymyxins are polypeptide antibiotics active against gram-negative bacteria such as escherichia coli and pseudomonas aeruginosa. Only polymyxin B and polymyxin E (colistin) were used clinically.

In carrying out the method, the culture medium may be supplemented with one or more of the above-mentioned antibiotics. The concentration of the antibiotic may vary depending on the antibiotic and the type of strain tested. Preferably, the dose of antibiotic is equal to or greater than the Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) of the particular antibiotic for the particular strain. Methods for determining MIC are known in the art (see, Andrews et al, Jantimicrob Chemother, 48 Suppl 1:5-16,2001). Representative graphs of MICs for around 40 Antimicrobial agents against four bacterial strains (E.coli, S.aureus, P.aeruginosa and E.faecalis) are shown in Table 3 entitled "Determination of minimum inhibition associations (MICs) of Antimicrobial agents by the European Commission on drug sensitivity testing standards (EUCAST) (European Society of clinical Microbiology and infection Diseases research CMI,9,1-7,2003).

Typically, the concentration of antibiotic may be increased to identify or detect resistant strains, e.g., by at least 2-fold, at least 5-fold, at least 10-fold, at least 20-fold, at least 50-fold, at least 100-fold, at least 300-fold, or even 1000-fold over the baseline MIC. This is particularly effective where the MIC of the target bacteria and antibiotic to the bacteria is known. For example, for E.coli, the MIC of most antibiotics can range from about 0.01mg/L to about 10 mg/L; however, resistant strains may not be susceptible until the concentration is increased, for example, 10-fold (i.e., 1 log-fold) to 1000-fold (i.e., 3-log-fold) over the baseline level. In this regard, the final antibiotic concentration may be adjusted accordingly.

Purely for illustrative purposes, the following doses-used to test bacteria for resistance to β -lactams such as amoxicillin, can be used, at concentrations ranging from about 2mg/L to about 40mg/L, particularly from about 5mg/L to about 20 mg/L. See U.S. patent No.9,347,888. On the other hand, to test the resistance of the bacteria to cloxacillin, the concentration range may be between about 25mg/L and about 300 mg/L. For carbapenems, the concentration range may be between 0.05 and 32 mg/L. This includes ranges of about 2mg/L to about 32mg/L for faropenem and about 0.05mg/L to about 2mg/L for doripenem (see Woodman et al, JMed Microbiol.,19(1):15-23,1983). For cephalosporins, the concentration may range from about 1mg/L to about 20mg/L, preferably from about 4mg/L to about 16mg/L (see Waterworth, J Clin Pathol,35:1177-1180, 1982).

More specifically, the antibiotic may be administered at 0.1mg/mL, 0.5mg/L, 1mg/mL, 2mg/mL, 3mg/mL, 4mg/mL, 5mg/mL, 6mg/mL, 7mg/mL, 8mg/mL, 9mg/mL, 10mg/mL, 11mg/mL, 12mg/mL, 13mg/mL, 14mg/mL, 15mg/mL, 16mg/mL, 17mg/mL, 18mg/mL, 19mg/mL, 20mg/mL, 21mg/mL, 22mg/mL, 23mg/mL, 24mg/mL, 25mg/mL, 26mg/mL, 27mg/mL, 28mg/mL, 29mg/mL, 30mg/mL, 31mg/mL, 32mg/mL, 33mg/mL, 34mg/mL, or, 35mg/mL, 36mg/mL, 37mg/mL, 38mg/mL, 39mg/mL, 40mg/mL, 41mg/mL, 42mg/mL, 43mg/mL, 44mg/mL, 45mg/mL, 50mg/mL, 60mg/mL, 70mg/mL, 80mg/m, 90mg/mL, 100mg/mL, 150mg/mL, 200mg/mL, 250mg/mL, 300mg/mL, 400mg/mL, 500mg/mL or higher. For example, imipenem and ertapenem can be used at concentrations of 50, 30, 20, 15, 10, 5, and 1 mg/mL. The dose can be similarly adjusted for a combination of antibiotics, for example, by first determining the MIC (combined agent) for the wild-type strain and escalating the dose to identify resistant strains.

The bacteria are cultured in the presence or absence of the antibiotic for a specific period of time, for example 2 hours to 160 hours, in particular 8 hours to 24 hours, in particular 10 hours to 16 hours. The bacteria may be in their growth or stationary phase prior to contact with the phage. The growth phase is a period characterized by cell doubling, in which the number of cells in the culture increases exponentially. The stationary phase is caused by both the growth of new bacteria and the death of senescent cells, usually due to growth limiting factors such as depletion of essential nutrients or accumulation of waste products. Preferably, the bacteria are in a growth phase prior to inoculation with the phage. Methods for determining the growth phase of bacteria are known in the art. See Hall et al, Mol Biol Evol,31(l):232-8, 2014.

In one embodiment, the bacteria are treated with an antibiotic prior to inoculation with the phage. The primary culture may optionally be washed, e.g., with a wash buffer, prior to inoculation. Depending on the density of the surviving culture, the primary culture or its wash pellet (obtained after centrifugation of the primary culture) can be re-grown in fresh primary medium (or antibiotic-containing medium) that has been inoculated with phage.

In another embodiment, the bacteria are inoculated with bacteriophage at the same time as being treated with the antibiotic agent. This embodiment may be particularly suitable for non-lytic phages.

C. Bacteriophage

Embodiments of the present method utilize host-specific phage. As used herein, the term "bacteriophage" has the conventional meaning as understood in the art, such as a virus that selectively infects one or more bacteria. Many bacteriophages are specific for a particular genus or species or strain of bacteria. The term "bacteriophage" is synonymous with the term "bacteriophage". The phage may include, but is not limited to, phage belonging to any of the following virus families: covering phage family (Corticoviridae), capsulophagae (Cystoviridae), filamentous phage family (Inoviridae), smooth phage family (Leviviridae), microphage family (Microviridae), Myoviridae (Myoviridae), short-tailed phage family (Podoviridae), long-tailed phage family (Siphorviridae), or layered phage family (Tectiviridae). The phage may be a lytic or lysogenic or filamentous phage. Lytic phages are those that follow a lytic pathway through completion of the lytic cycle rather than entering the lysogenic pathway. Lytic bacteriophages undergo viral replication, which results in cell membrane lysis, cell destruction, and release of progeny bacteriophage particles that are capable of infecting other cells. A lysogenic bacteriophage is a bacteriophage that is capable of entering the lysogenic pathway, wherein the bacteriophage becomes a dormant, passive part of the cell genome before the completion of its lytic cycle. Filamentous phages comprise a circular single-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid (ssDNA) genome packaged as a filament. These phages do not multiply by lytic bacteria; instead, they are secreted into the environment without killing the host.

In one embodiment, the phage is a lytic or proliferative phage (e.g., T4, T7, T3, and MS 2). In another embodiment, the bacteriophage is a temperate or lysogenic bacteriophage (e.g., a lambda bacteriophage). In yet another embodiment, the bacteriophage is a filamentous bacteriophage (e.g., fl, fd, and M13). Combinations of various bacteriophages may also be used. Phage display techniques are known in the art, for example, U.S. Pat. nos. 8,685,893; U.S. patent nos. 7,811,973; and U.S. patent publication No. 2002-0044922. Preferably, the phage is capable of transforming a host bacterium. As used herein, the term "transformation" refers to the introduction of DNA into a host cell such that the DNA can replicate as an extrachromosomal element or by chromosomal integration. That is, transformation refers to the alteration of gene synthesis by the introduction of foreign DNA into a cell. As is recognized in the art, the DNA of most bacteria is contained in a single circular molecule called the bacterial chromosome and one or more plasmids.

Bacteriophages are engineered or recombinant bacteriophages that are used as vectors for genes foreign to the native bacteriophage. As used herein, the term "recombinant bacteriophage" or "engineered bacteriophage" is a bacteriophage that contains a non-naturally occurring nucleic acid sequence or has a sequence formed by artificially combining two additional separate sequence segments. Such artificial combination may be accomplished by chemical synthesis or by artificial manipulation of the isolated nucleic acid fragments, for example, by genetic engineering techniques or by transposition using DNA. Similarly, a recombinant protein is a protein encoded by a recombinant nucleic acid molecule. The term recombinant bacteriophage includes bacteriophages altered only by insertion of nucleic acids, e.g., by insertion of nucleic acids encoding heterologous proteins for use as reporter or indicator molecules.

In certain embodiments, the phage is a purified phage. The term purified does not require absolute purity; rather, it is intended as a relative term. A purified molecule is one in which the molecule is more enriched than it is in its natural environment, e.g., a content in which the molecule makes up at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 80%, at least 90%, at least 99% or more of the total content of similar molecules in the sample. For example, a purified sample of recombinant phage is a sample in which the recombinant phage comprises at least 50% of all phage in the sample.

A list of pathogenic bacteria and their known host-specific phages is given in the following paragraphs, and preferred types of bacteria-phage pairs are provided in tables 1-3. Synonyms and spelling variants are indicated in parentheses. The same nouns are repeated each time they occur (e.g., D). Unnamed phages were denoted by "NN" next to their genus.

Bacteria of the genus actinomycete are infected with the following phages: av-1, Av-2, Av-3, BF307, CT1, CT2, CT3, CT4, CT6, CT7, CT8 and 1281.

Bacteria of the genus aeromonas are infected with the following phages: AA-1, Aeh2, N, PM1, TP446, 3, 4, 11, 13, 29, 31, 32, 37, 43-10T, 51, 54, 55R 1, 56RR2, 57, 58, 59.1, 60, 63, Aeh1, F, PM2, 1, 25, 31, 40rr2.8t, (syn 44R), (syn 44rr2.8t), 65, PM3, PM4, PM5, and PM 6.

Bacteria of the genus bacillus are infected with the following phages: A. A-K-, BC, BLL, BL, BP142, BSL, BS104, BS105, BS106, BTB, B1715V, -1, Col, Cor, CP-53, CS-1, CS, ent, FP, PS, FS, GT, GV-1, GV-2, GT-4, g, H, ken, KK-88, Kyu, J7-1, LP, (syn ═ LP-52),L, Mex, MJ-1, mor, MP-7, MP, Neo, No 2, N6, PBC, PBLA, PBP, P, S-a, SF, Sha, Sil, SPO, (syn. phi SPP), S-Pp, STI, ST, SU-11, t, Tb, 560, Tb595, Td, Tg, Tp, Tin, Tm, Tog, tol, TP-1, TP-10vir, TP-15C, TP-16C, TP-17C, TP-19, TP-84, Tt, type A, type B, type C, D type, E type,

Figure BDA0002185536470000141

VA-9、W、wx23、wx26、Yun1、α、γ、p11、

Figure BDA0002185536470000142

1A, 1B, 1-97A, 1-97B, 2, 3, 5, 12, 14, 20, 30, 35, 36, 37, 38, 41C, 51, 63, 64, 138D, I, II, IV, NN-Bacillus (13),. AR, Bace-11, (syn-11), Bastille, BL, BP124, BS, Ch, CP-51, CP-54, D-5, den, DP-7, ent, FoS, FS, gamma, GE, SP-2, GT, SST-1, GT-2, GT-3, GT-4, SP-5, SP-6, GF-7, GV-6, g, I, IS, MP, TP, MP, Tg, MP-1, MP-2, MP-1, MP-MP, MP-1, MP-MP, SP-6, SP-VI, SP-7, sub, GF, TG, MP-6, MP-MP, MP-T, MP-1, MP-MP, MP-1, MP-1, MP-MP, MP-1, MP-MP,

Figure BDA0002185536470000143

1. 1, 2C, 3NT, 4, 5, 6,7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 17, 18, 19, 21, 138, III, 4 (Bacillus megaterium),4 (Bacillus sphaericus), AR13, BPP-10, BS32, BS107, B1, B2, GA-I, GP-10, GV-3, GV-5, g8, MP20, MP27, MP49, Nf, PP5, PP6, SF5, Tg18, TP-1, Versailles, Bacillus sphaericus, Bacillus,

Figure BDA0002185536470000144

1-97, 837/IV, NN-Bacillus (1), Bat10, BSL10, BSL11, BS6, BS11, BS16, BS23, BS101, BS102, G18, mor1, PBL1, SN45, thu2, thu3, Tm1, Tm2, TP-20, TP21, TP52, F-type, G-type, IV-type, NN-Bacillus (3), BLE, (syn ═ θ c), BS2, BS4, BS5, B5, BS5, 5-4, PBA 5, AP 5-04, AP 5-11, AP 5-23, AP 5-26, AP 5-27 and BamH 35. the specific bacteriophage is deficient in PBSXPS 10716, SV-72, DPSXP-72, PBSXB-72, DPB-5, DPSXB-72, DPB-72, DPL 5, DPL-72, DPLB, DPSXZ-72, DPSXT-72, DPLB-72, DPSXT-72, DPS-72, DPLB-5, DPSXT-5, DPL-72, DP.

Bacteria of the genus Bacteroides are infected with phages ad12, Baf-44, Baf-48B, Baf-64, Bf-1, Bf-52, B40-8, F1, β 1, Variopsis cumingii,11. 67.1, 67.3, 68.1, NN Bacteroides (3), Bf42, Bf71 and BF-41.

Bacteria of the genus bordetella are infected with the following phages: 134 and NN-Bordetella (3).

Bacteria of the borrelia genus are infected with the following phages: NN-Borrelia (1) and NN-Borrelia.

Bacteria of the genus brucella are infected with the following phages: a422, Bk, (syn ═ Berkeley), BM29, FO1, (syn ═ FO1), (syn ═ FQ1), D, FP2, (syn ═ FP2), (syn ═ FD2), Fz, (syn ═ Fz75/13), (syn ═ fineze 75/13), (syn ═ Fi), F1, (syn ═ F1), F1M, (syn ═ F1M), (syn ═ fimm), F1U, (syn ═ F1U), (syn ═ F U), (syn ═ 36f U), (36f U), (syn ═ 36f U), (syn ═ 36f U), (36f U), (syn ═ 36f U), (36f U), (syn ═ 36f U), (36f U), (syn ═ U), (36f U), (syn ═ 36f U), (syn ═ 36f U), (36f U), (36f U), (U, (syn ═ Weybridge), X, 3, 6,7, 10/1, (syn ═ 10), (syn ═ F8), (syn ═ F8), 12m, 24/II, (syn ═ 24), (syn ═ F9), (syn ═ F9), 45/III, (syn ═ 45), 75, 84, 212/XV, (syn ═ 212), (syn ═ F10), (syn ═ F10), 371/XXIX, (syn ═ F11), (syn ═ P11), and 513.

Bacteria of the genus burkholderia are infected with the following phages: CP 75.

Bacteria of the genus campylobacter are infected with the following phages: type C, NTCC12669, NTCC12670, NTCC12671, NTCC12672, NTCC12673, NTCC12674, NTCC12675, NTCC12676, NTCC12677, NTCC12678, NTCC12679, NTCC12680, NTCC12681, NTCC12682, NTCC12683, NTCC12684, 32f, 111C, 191, Vfi-6, (syn ═ V19), VfV-3, V2, V3, V8, V16, (syn ═ Vfi-1), V19, V20(V45), V45, (syn ═ V-45) and NN-campylobacter (1).

The bacterium of the genus chlamydia is infected with the following phages: chp1 are provided.

Clostridium bacteria are infected with phages such as CAK1, CA5, Ca7, CE β, (syn ═ 1C), CE γ, Cld1, C-n71, C-203Tox-, DE β, (syn ═ 1D), (syn ═ 1Dtox +), HM3, KM1, KT, Ms, NA1, (syn ═ Na1Tox +), PA1350e, and,

Figure BDA0002185536470000151

PL73, PL78, P5771, P19402, 1Ctox +, 2Ctox-, 2D, (syn ═ 2Dtox +), 3C, (syn ═ 3Ctox +), 4C, (syn ═ 4tox +), 56, III-1, NN-clostridium (61), NB1 tox-78, CA 78, HMT, HM 78, PF 78, P-23, P-46, Q-05, Q-06, Q-16, Q-21, Q-26, Q-40, Q-46, S111, SA 78, WA 78, W111, W523, 80, 78, CA 78, CPT 78, C78, HM 78, H78/78 a, P78/H78, PF 78, P78/S78, P78/n 78, P78/S78, P78/n 78, P78/n 78, P78/S78, P78/S72, P78/S.

Bacteria of the genus corynebacterium are infected with phages, CGI1 (defective), A, A2, A3, a110, a128, a133, a137, a139, a155, a182, B, BF, B17, B18, B51, B271, B275, B276, B277, B279, B282, C, cap1, CC1, CG1, CG2, CG33, CL31, Cog, (syn ═ CG5), D, E, F, H, H-1, hq1, hq2, I1/H33, I1/H33, J, K, K, (syn ═ Ktox-), L, L, (syn ═ Ltox +), L, L-1, MC-2, MC-3, MC-4, MLMa, N, O, ov L, L, obov L, L, synov L, L, syn ═ RS, uhtox ═ L, L, (+) ═ L, L, L, L ═ L, L, (+) ═ L, L, L, L ═ y +), uhtox +),ω, 1a, 1/1180, 2, 2/1180, 5/1180, 5ad/9717, 7/4465, 8/4465, 8ad/10269, 10/9253, 13/9253, 15/3148, 21/9253, 28, 29, 55, 2747, 2893, 4498, and 5848.

Bacteria of the genus enterococcus are infected with the following phages: DF78, F1, F2, 1,2, 4, 14, 41, 867, D1, SB24, 2BV, 182, 225, C2, C2F, E3, E62, DS96, H24, M35, P3, P9, SB101, S2, 2BII, 5, 182a, 705, 873, 881, 940, 1051, 1057, 21096C, NN-enterococcus (1), PE1, P1, F3, F4, VD13, 1, 200, 235 and 341.

Bacteria of the genus erysipelothrix are infected with the following phages: NN-Erysipelothrix strain (1).

Bacteria of the genus escherichia are infected with the following phages: BW73, B278, D6, D108, E, E1, E24, E41, FI-2, FI-4, FI-5, HI8A, HI8B, i, MM, Mu, (syn ═ Mu), (syn ═ Mu1), (syn ═ Mu-1), (syn ═ MuI), (syn ═ Mu), O25, PhI-5, Pk, PSP3, P1, P1D, P2, P4 (defective), S1, P D, and f 353 (defective) (defective type),

Figure BDA0002185536470000155

Psi (defective), 7 alpha,15 (deficient), 18, 28-1, 186, 299, NN-escherichia (2), ab 48, CM, C4, C16, DD-VI, (syn ═ DD-VI), (syn ═ DDVI), E4, E7, E28, F11, F13, H, H1, H3, H8, K3, M, N, ND-2, ND-3, ND4, ND-5, ND6, ND-7, Ox-1, (syn ═ Ox1), (syn ═ 11F), Ox-2, (syn ═ Ox2), (syn ═ Ox2), Ox-3, Ox-4, Ox-S, (syn ═ 5), Ox-6, (syn ═ 66F),

Figure BDA0002185536470000161

O111、Phl-1、RB42、RB43、RB49、RB69、S、Sal-1、Sal-2、Sal-3、Sal-4、Sal-5、Sal-6、TC23、TC45、TuII*-6、(syn=TuII*)、TuII*-24、TuII*46、TuII*-60、T2、(syn=gamma)、(syn=γ)、(syn=PC)、(syn=P.C.)、(syn=T-2)、(syn=T2)、(syn=P4)、T4、(syn=T-4)、(syn=T4)、T6、T35、α1、1、1A、3、(syn=Ac3)、3A、3T+、(syn=3)、(syn=M1)、9266Q、CFO103、HK620、J、K、K1F、m59、no.A、no.E、no.3、no.9、N4、sd、(syn=Sd)、(syn=SD)、(syn=Sd)、(syn=sd)、(syn=SD)、(syn=CD)、T3、(syn=T-3)、(syn=T3)、T7、(syn=T-7)、(syn=T7)、WPK、W31、ΔΗ、

Figure BDA0002185536470000163

Φ04-CF、Φ05、Φ06、Φ07、Omega 8,1, 3,7, 8, 26, 27, 28-2, 29, 30, 31, 32, 38, 39, 42, 933W, NN-Escherichia (1), Esc-7-11, AC30, CVX-5, C1, DDUP, EC1, EC2, E21, E29, F1, F26S, F27S, Hi, HK022, HK97, (syn. phi. HK97), HK139, HK253, HK256, K7, ND-1, ND-2, HK-3, HK 7, and HK-3,no.D、PA-2、q、S2、T1、(syn=α)、(syn=P28)、(syn=T-1)、(syn=T1)、T3C、T5、(syn=T-5)、(syn=T5)、UC-1、w、β4、γ2、λ、(syn=lambda)、(syn=Φλ)、ΦD326、Φ06、Φ7、Φ10、χ、(syn=χ1)、2. 4, 4a, 6, 8a, 102, 150, 168, 174, 3000, AC6, AC7, AC28, AC43, AC50, AC57, AC81, AC95, H K243, K10, ZG/3A, 5a, 21EL, H19-f and 933H.

Bacteria of the genus clostridium are infected with the following phages: NN-Clostridium (2), fv83-554/3, fv88-531/2, 227, fv2377, fv2527 and fv 8501.

Bacteria of the genus haemophilus are infected with the following phages: HP1 (haemophilus phage HP1), S2 and N3.

The helicobacter bacteria were infected with the following phages: HP1 (H.pylori phage HP1) and NN-helicobacter (1).

The bacterium of the genus klebsiella was infected with the following phages: AIO-2, Kl4, Kl6, Kl, (syn-Kl), Kl106, Kl171, Kl181, Kl832, AIO-1, AO-2, AO-3, FC-10, (syn-Kl), Kl, (syn-Kl), (syn-Kl/11), Kl, (syn), Kl, (syn), Kl, (syn-Kl), Kl, (syn), Kl-VII, Kl-1, Kl-VII, Kl-1, Kl-11, Kl-1, Kl-1, Kl, 380, Kl, (syn-Kl 25), Kl42B, (syn-Kl 42), (syn-Kl 42B), Kl181B, (syn-Kl 181), (syn-Kl 181B), Kl765/1, (syn-Kl 765/1), Kl842B, (syn-Kl 832B), Kl937B, (syn-Kl 937B), L1, phi 28, 7, 231, 483, 490, 864/100, and so on.

Bacteria of the leptospira genus are infected with the following phages: LE1, LE3, LE4 and NN-Leptospira (1).

The listeria bacteria were infected with the following phages: a511, O1761, 4211, 4286, (syn ═ BO54), a005, a006, a020, a500, a502, a511, a118, a620, a640, B012, B021, B024, B025, B035, B051, B053, B054, B055, B056, B101, B110, B545, B604, B653, C707, D441, HSO47, H1OG, H8/73, H19, H21, H43, H46, H107, H108, H10, H163/84, H1312, H340, H387, H391/73, H684/74, H924A, PSA, U153, H A, H3572, H006, B45, B31, B2, B2B,

Figure BDA0002185536470000168

(syn ═ P35), 00241, 00611, 02971A, 02971C, 5/476, 5/911, 5/939, 5/11302, 5/11605, 5/11704, 184, 575, 633, 699/694, 744, 900, 1090, 1317, 1444, 1652, 1806, 1807, 1921/959, 1921/11367, 1921/11500, 1921/11566, 1921/12460, 1921/12582, 1967, 2389, 2425, 2671, 2685, 3274, 3550, 3551, 3552, 4276, 4277, 4292, 4477, 5337, 5348/11363, 5348/11646, 5348/12430, 5348/12434, 10072, 11355C, 11711A, 12029, 12981, 13441, 90666, 90816, 93253, 907515, 910716, and NN-listeria (15).

Bacteria of the genus morganella are infected with the following phages: 47.

bacteria of the genus Mycobacterium are infected with phages, I3, AG1, AL1, ATCC 11759, A2, B.C3, BG2, BK 2, Mycobacterium casei, B-1, B2, Clark, C2, DNAII, DSP 2, D2, GS 42, (syn ═ GS 42), GS 2, (syn ═ GS-7), (syn ═ GS 2), IP 2, lacticola, Legendre, Leo, L2, (syn ═ L-5), MC-1, MC-3, MC-4, minetti, MTPH 2, Mx 2, 2/3659 a, phi, (syn phi 1), phyloni, Polonenti II, Poleitus, 2M 2, ("PSE ═ phi ═ L-,1B, 1F, 1H, 1/1, 67, 106, 1430, B1, (syn ═ Bol), B24, D, D29, F-K, F-S, HP, Polonus I, Roy, R1, (syn ═ R1-Myb), (syn ═ R1), 11, 31, 40, 50, 103a, 103B, 128, 3111-D, 3215-D and NN-mycobacterium (1).

The neisserial bacterium is infected with the following phages: group I, group II and NP 1.

Bacteria of the genus nocardia are infected with the following phages: p8, NJ-L, NS-8, N5 and NN-Nocardia (1).

Bacteria of the genus proteus are infected with the following phages: pm5, 13vir, 2/44, 4/545, 6/1004, 13/807, 20/826, 57, 67b, 78, 107/69, 121, 9/0, 22/608, 30/680, Pm1, Pm3, Pm4, Pm6, Pm7, Pm9, Pm10, Pm11, Pv2, pi 1, Pm,7/549、9B/2、10A/31、12/55、14、15、16/789、17/971、19A/653、23/532、25/909、26/219、27/953、32A/909、33/971、34/13、65、5006M、7480b、VI、13/3a、Clichy 12、π2600、1/1004, 5/742, 9, 12, 14, 22, 24/860, 2600/D52, Pm8, and 24/2514.

Bacteria of the genus providencia are infected with the following phages: PL25, PL26, PL37, 9211/9295, 9213/9211b, 9248, 7/R49, 74761322, 7478/325, 7479, 7480, 9000/9402 and 9213/9211 a.

Bacteria of the genus pseudomonas are infected with the following phages: pf1, (syn-Pf-1), Pf2, Pf3, PP7, PRR1, 7s, NN-pseudomonas (1), AI-1, M-2, B17, B89, CB3, Col 2, Col 11, Col 18, Col 21, C154, C163, C167, C2121, E79, F8, ga, gb, H22, K1, M4, N2, Nu, PB-1, (syn-PB 1), Pf16, PMN17, PP1, PP8, Psa1, PsP1, PsP2, PS PsP2, PTB PsP2, PX 72, PsP2, p3616、PYO18、PYO19、PYO20、PYO29、PYO32、PYO33、PYO35、PYO36、PYO37、PYO38、PYO39、PYO41、PYO42、PYO45、PYO47、PYO48、PYO64、PYO69、PYO103、PlK、SLP1、SL2、S2、UNL-1、wy、Ya1、Ya4、Ya11、

Figure BDA0002185536470000174

(syn=ΦKZ)、

Figure BDA0002185536470000176

Φmu78、1/72, 2/79, 3/DO, 4/237, 5/406, 6C, 6/6660, 7v, 7/184, 8/280, 9/95, 10/502, 11/DE, 12/100, 12S, 16, 21, 24, 25F, 27, 31, 44, 68, 71, 95, 109, 188, 337, 352, 1214, NN-Pseudomonas (23), A856, B12/100, CI-1, CI-2, C12/100, 12/100-1, F116, HF, H12/100, K104, K109, K166, K267, N12/100, O6 12/100-25 12/100, Pf, PPN 12/100, PP 12/100, PX 12/100, PSP 92207, PSP 72, PSP 9272, PSP 12/100, Ya5, Ya7,ΦKf77、ΦmnF82、

Figure BDA00021855364700001710

Figure BDA00021855364700001711

1、2、2、3、4、5、6、7、7、8、9、10、11、12、12B、13、14、15、14、15、16、17、18、19、20、20、21. 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 31, 53, 73, 119x, 145, 147, 170, 267, 284, 308, 525, NN-pseudomonas (5), af, a7, B3, B33, B39, BI-1, C22, D3, D37, D40, D3112, F40, g, gd, ge, gf, Hw 40, Jb 40, KF 40, L °, OXN-32 40-52 40-1, PC 40-1, PH 40, PM 36132, PMW, PM 40, PM 36sylp 401, Pssy 36sylp 401, Pssy PP 72, Pssy40, ps3672, Pssy40, ps3672, Pssy40, ps3672,

Figure BDA00021855364700001712

Φc11、

Figure BDA00021855364700001713

2. 2F, 5, 7M, 11, 13, 13/441, 14, 20, 24, 40, 45, 49, 61, 73, 148, 160, 198, 218, 222, 236, 242, 246, 249, 258, 269, 295, 297, 309, 318, 342, 350, 351, 357-1, 400-1, NN-pseudomonas (6), G10, M6, M6a, L1, PB2, Pssy15, Pssy4210, Pssy4220, PYO12, PYO34, PYO49, PYO50, PYO51, PY052, PYO53, PYO57, PYO59, PYO200, PX2, PX5, SL4,And 1214.

Bacteria of the genus rickettsia are infected with the following phages: NN-Rickettsia (1).

Bacteria of the genus salmonella are infected with the following phages: b. beccles, CT, d, dunde, f, Fels 2, GI, GIII, GVI, GVIII, K, I, j, L, O1, (syn ═ O-1), (syn ═ O1), (syn ═ O-I), (syn ═ 7), O2, O3, P3, P9a, P10, Sab3, Sab5, San15, San17, SI, Taunton, ViI, (syn ═ Vil), 9, NN-salmonella (1), N-1, N-5, N-10, N-17, N-22, 11, 12, 16-19, 20.2, vi36, 449C/C178, 966A/C259, a, b.a.o.r., g. 4, GIII, syn L6 22, P M, MG40, P-19, 20.2, sn7, SP-368672, P8672, P-368672, P-8672, snp-847, P8672, 368672, 367, P-7, 368672, P-7, P-r 3, P-7, P-7, P-, ViV, ViVI, ViVII, works op, 15, 34, 1, 37, 1(40), (syn ═ Φ 1[40]), 1, 422, 2, 2.5, 3B, 4, 5, 6, 14(18), 8, 14(6,7), 10, 27, 28B, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 36, 37, 39, 1412, SNT-3,7-11, 40.3, C236, C557, C625, C966, G, GV, G173, h, IRA, Jersey, M, P-1, P-3, P-12, Sab, San, NN, San, salmonella, San, NN, sa,1, sa.

Bacteria of the genus serratia are infected with the following phages: A2P, PS20, SMB3, SMP5, SM2, V40, V56, kappa, DCP-3, (DCP-6, 3M, 10/1a, 20A, 34CC, 34H, 38T, 345G, 345P, 501B, SMB2, SMP2, BC, BT, CW2, CW3, CW4, CW5, L1232, L2232, L34, L.228, SLP, SMPA, V.43, sigma, beta,Φ CP6-1, Φ CP6-2, Φ C Ρ 6-5, 3T, 5,8, 9F, 10/1, 20E, 32/6, 34B, 34CT, 34P, 37, 41, 56D, 56P, 60P, 61/6, 74/6, 76/4, 101/8900, 226, 227, 228, 229F, 286, 289, 290F, 512, 764a, 2847/10, 2847/10a, L.359, and SMB 1.

Bacteria of the genus shigella are infected with the following phages: fsa, (syn ═ a), FSD2D, (syn ═ D2D), (syn ═ W2D), FSD2E, (syn ═ W2e), fv, F6, F7.8, H-Sh, PE5, P90, SfII, Sh, shii, SHIV, (syn ═ HIV), SHVI, (syn ═ HVI), SHVIII, (syn ═ HVIII), SK γ 66, (syn ═ gamma 66), (syn ═ gamma 66), SKIII, (syn ═ SIIIb), (syn ═ III), SKIV, (syn ═ SIVa), (syn ═ lV), SKIVa, (syn ═ SIVAn), (syn ═ IVA), (syn ═ ivi ═ vi), (syn ═ v), (SKVI ═ v), (syn ═ gamma), (van), (syn ═ gamma), (Sh ═ gamma), (SHVI), (Sh ═yn=SVI)、(syn=VI)、SKVIII、(syn=SVIII)、(syn=VIII)、SKVIIIA、(syn=SVIIIA)、(syn=VIIIA)、STVI、STIX、STXI、STXII、S66、W2、(syn=D2c)、(syn=D20)、ΦIV1、3-SO-R、8368-SO-R、F7、(syn=FS7)、(syn=K29)、F10、(syn=FS10)、(syn=K31)、I1、(syn=alfa)、(syn=FSα)、(syn=K18)、(syn=α)、I2、(syn=a)、(syn=K19)、SG35、(syn=G35)、(syn=SO-35/G)、SG55、(syn=SO-55/G)、SG3201、(syn=SO-3201/G)、SHII、(syn=HII)、SHV、(syn=SHV)、SHX、SHX、SKII、(syn=K2)、(syn=KII)、(syn=SII)、(syn=SsII)、(syn=II)、SKIV、(syn=SIVb)、(syn=SsIV)、(syn=IV)、SKIVa、(syn=SIVab)、(syn=SsIVa)、(syn=lVa)、SKV、(syn=K4)、(syn=KV)、(syn=SV)、(syn=SsV)、(syn=V)、SKX、(syn=K9)、(syn=KX)、(syn=SX)、(syn=SsX)、(syn=X)、STV、(syn=T35)、(syn=35-50-R)、STVIII、(syn=T8345)、(syn=8345-SO-S-R)、W1、(syn=D8)、(syn=FSD8)、W2a、(syn=D2A)、(syn=FS2a)、DD-2、Sf6、FS1、(syn=F1)、SF6、(syn=F6)、SG42、(syn=SO-42/G)、SG3203、(syn=SO-3203/G)、SKF12、(syn=SsF12)、(syn=F12)、(syn=F12)、STII、(syn=1881-SO-R)、γ66、(syn=gamma 66a)、(syn=Ssγ66)、B11、DDVII、(syn=DD7)、FSD2b、(syn=W2B)、FS2、(syn=F2)、(syn=F2)、FS4、(syn=F4)、(syn=F4)、FS5、(syn=F5)、(syn=F5)、FS9、(syn=F9)、(syn=F9)、F11、P2-SO-S、SG36、(syn=SO-36/G)、(syn=G36)、SG3204、(syn=SO-3204/G)、SG3244、(syn=SO-3244/G)、SHI、(syn=HI)、SHVII、(syn=HVII)、SHIX、(syn=HIX)、SHXI、SHXII、(syn=HXII)、SKI、KI、(syn=SI)、(syn=SsI)、SKVII、(syn=KVII)、(syn=SVII)、(syn=SsVII)、SKIX、(syn=KIX)、(syn=SIX)、(syn=SsIX)、SKXII、(syn=KXII)、(syn=SVII)、(syn=SsXII)、STI、SIII、STIII、STIV、STVII、S70、S206、U2-SO—S、3210-SO-S、3859-SO-S、4020-SO-S、 Shii, (syn ═ HIII), SHXI, (syn ═ HXI) and SXI, (syn ═ KXI), (syn ═ SXI), (syn ═ SsXI), (syn ═ XI).

Bacteria of the genus staphylococcus are infected with the following phages: A. EW, K, Ph5, Ph9, Ph10, Ph13, P1, P2, P3, P4, P8, P9, P10, RG, SB-1, (syn ═ Sb-1), S3K, Tport, Twort, and Twot,06、40、58、119、130、131、200、1623、STC1、(syn=stc1)、STC2、(syn=stc2)、44AHJD、68、AC1、AC2、A6"C"、A9"C"、b581、CA-1、CA-2、CA-3、CA-4、CA-5、D11、L39x35、L54a、M42、N1、N2、N3、N4、N5、N7、N8、N10、N11、N12、N13、N14、N16、Ph6、Ph12、Ph14、UC-18、U4、U15、S1、S2、S3、S4、S5、X2、Z1、

Figure BDA0002185536470000192

ω、11、(syn=P11-M15)、15、28、28A、29、31、31B、37、42D、(syn=P42D)、44A、48、51、52、52A、(syn=P52A)、52B、53、55、69、71、(syn=P71)、71A、72、75、76、77、79、80、80a、82、82A、83A、84、85、86、88、88A、89、90、92、95、96、102、107、108、111、129-26、130、130A、155、157、157A、165、187、275、275A、275B、356、456、459、471、471A、489、581、676、898、1139、1154A、1259、1314、1380、1405、1563、2148、2638A、2638B、2638C、2731、2792A、2792B、2818、2835、2848A、3619、5841、12100、AC3、A8、A10、A13、b594n、D、M12、N9、N15、P52、P87、S1、S6、Z4、

Figure BDA0002185536470000193

3A, 3B, 3C, 6,7, 16, 21, 42B, 42C, 42E, 44, 47A, 47C, 51, 54x1, 70, 73, 75, 78, 81, 82, 88, 93, 94, 101, 105, 110, 115, 129/16, 174, 594n, 1363/14, 2460 and NN-staphylococcus (1).

Bacteria of the genus streptococcus are infected with the following phages: EJ-1, NN-Streptococcus (1), a, CI, FLOThs, H39, Cp-1, Cp-5, Cp-7, Cp-9, Cp-10, AT298, A5, a10/J1, a10/J2, a10/J5, a10/J9, A25, BT11, b6, CA1, c20-1, c20-2, DP-1, Dp-4, DT1, ET42, e10, FA101, FEThs, FK, FKK101, FKL10, FKP74, FK11, FLOThs, FY101, F1, F10, F20140/76, g, GT-234, HB3, (syn-HB-3), HB-623, HB-746, M102, O1205-Streptococcus (1), CI, FLOThs, H39, Cp-1, Cp-5, A-9, C-1,

Figure BDA0002185536470000194

PST、P0、P1、P2、P3、P5、P6、P8、P9、P9、P12、P13、P14、P49、P50、P51、P52、P53、P54、P55、P56、P57、P58、P59、P64、P67、P69、P71、P73、P75、P76、P77、P82、P83、P88、sc、sch、sf、Sfi11、(syn=SFi11)、 sfi19、(syn=SFi19)、

Figure BDA0002185536470000197

Sfi21、(syn=SFi21)、 STG、STX、st2、ST2、ST4、S3、s265、Φ17、Φ57、 Φ 7201, ω 1, ω 2, ω 3, ω 4, ω 5, ω 6, ω 8, ω 10, 1, 6, 9, 10F, 12/12, 14, 17SR, 19S, 24, 50/33, 50/34, 55/14, 55/15, 70/35, 70/36, 71/ST15, 71/45, 71/46, 74F, 79137, 79/38, 80/J4, 80/J9, 80/ST16, 80/15, 80/47, 80/48, 101, 103/39, 103/40, 121/41, 121/42, 123/43, 123/44, 124/44, 337/ST17 and NN-streptococcus (34).

Bacteria of the genus treponema are infected with the following phages: NN-Treponema pallidum (1).

Bacteria of the genus vibrio are infected with the following phages: c < X > phi, fs, (syn < s > 1), fs2, 1vpfs, Vf12, Vf33, y < pi > I < phi >, VSK, v6, 493, CP-T1, ET25, kappa, K139, LaboI,) XN-69 25-86, O6 25-21-25-1, P147, rp-1, SE 25, VA-1, (syn < 25-1), 25-2, 25-1, VP 25, X25, (syn < phi > 29 d' H < reselle), 1, phi HAHAWI-1, HAWI-2, phi-3, phi-phi 4, HAWI-25, HAHC-1-HAHC-25, HAPh-25, HAphi-3, phi-36phi 3, phi-phi, Phi HC2-3, Phi HC2-4, Phi HC3-1, Phi HC3-2, Phi HC3-3, Phi HD1S-1, Phi HD2S-1, Phi HD2S-2, Phi HD2S-3, Phi HD2S-4, Phi HD2S-5, Phi HDO-1, Phi HDO-2, Phi HDO-3, Phi HDO-4, Phi HDO-5, Phi HDO-6, Phi KL-33, Phi KL-34, Phi KL-35, Phi KL-36, Phi KW1H-2, Phi KWH-3, Phi KWH-4, Phi MARQ-1, Phi MARQ-2, Phi MARQ-3, Phi MOAT-1, Phi PEO 139, Phi PEL A-1, Phi PEL A-3, Phi PEL-A, Phi PEL-468-1, Phi-468-3, Phi-1-468-3, Phi, Phi PEL13B3-2, phi PEL13B-3, phi PEL13B-4, and phi PEL13B-5、ΦPEL13B-6、ΦPEL13B-7、ΦPEL13B-8、ΦPEL13B-9、ΦPEL13B-10、

Figure BDA00021855364700001915

Φ16、

Figure BDA00021855364700001916

1-11, 5, 13, 14, 16, 24, 32, 493, 6214, 7050, 7227, II, (syn ═ group 11),V, VIII, Vibrio NN (13), KVP20, KVP40, nt-1, O6N-22P, P68, e1, e2, e3, e4, e5, FK, G, J, K, nt-6, N1, N2, N3, N4, N5, O6N-34P, OXN-72P, OXN-85P, OXN-100P, P, Ph-1, PL163/10, Q, S, T, Kvp2, Kvp40, and FK, G, J, K, nt-6, N1, N2, N3, N4, N5, O,1-9, 37, 51, 57, 70A-8, 72A-4, 72A-10, 110A-4, 333, 4996, I, (syn group I), I II, (syn group III), VI, (syn a-Saratov), VII, IX, X, NN-vibrio (6), pA1, 7-8, 70A-2, 71A-6, 72A-5, 72A-8, 108A-10, 109A-6, 109A-8, 110A-1, 110A-5, 110A-7, hv-1, OXN-52P, P13, P38, P53, P65, P108, P111, TP1, VP3, VP6, VPI2, VP13, 70A-3, 70A-4, 70A-10, 72A-1, 108A-3, 109-B1, 110A-2, 149,IV, (syn group IV), NN-vibrio (22), VP5, VP11, VP15, VP16, α 1, α 2, α 3a, 3B, 353B and NN-vibrio (7).

Bacteria of the genus yersinia are infected with the following phages: H. h-1, H-2, H-3, H-4, Lucas 110, Lucas303, Lucas 404, YerA3, YerA7, YerA20, YerA41, 3/M64-76, 5/G394-76, 6/C753-76, 8/C239-76, 9/F18167, 1701, 1710, PST, 1/F2852-76, D' Hererelle, EV, H, Kotljarova, PTB, R, Y, YerA41, Lucas303, Lura 404, YerA7, YerA 3576, 3/M64-76, 5/G394-76, 6/C753-76, 8/C239-76, 9/F,3、4/C1324-76, 7/F783-76, 903, 1/M6176 and Yer2 AT.

In another embodiment, the method is performed using a combination of at least 2, at least 3, at least 4, at least 5, at least 6, at least 7, at least 8, at least 9, or more of the foregoing bacteriophages. One skilled in the art recognizes that transformation efficiency can be manipulated, e.g., enhanced or inhibited, depending on the particular combination of phage used.

In particular, bacterial species (and corresponding host-specific phages) include Aeromonas hydrophila (PM2), Bacillus anthracis (Gamma), Bacillus subtilis (SPP1), Bordetella pertussis (Bordetella pertussis) (see Pereverev et al Zh Mikrobiol 5: 54-57,1981), Borrelia burgdorferi (Bordetella burgdorferi) ((Bordetella burgdorferi))

Figure BDA0002185536470000204

See Eggers et al, JBacteriol 183: 4771-4778,2001), Brucella abortus (Brucella abortus) (TB; 212; 371) campylobacter jejuni (Campybacter jejuni)Clostridium perfringens (Clostridium perfringens)Enterococcus faecalis (Enterococcus faecalis)

Figure BDA0002185536470000207

Enterococcus faecium (Enterococcus faecium) (ENB6), Escherichia coli (Escherichia coli) (P1; T1; T3, T4, T5; T7, KH1, Escherichia coli (Escherichia coli),lambda;

Figure BDA0002185536470000209

mu), Klebsiella pneumoniae (Klebsiella pneumoniae) (60; 92) listeria monocytogenes (Listeria monocytogenes) (a511, a 118;243; h387; 2389; 2671; 2685; 4211) mycobacterium leprae (Mycobacterium bacteriophage, L5), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mycobacterium tuberculosis) (LG; DSGA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (E79, G101; b3; pp.7), Salmonella anatipestifer (E5), Salmonella bovis (Salmonella choleraesuis) (98), Salmonella choleraesuis (Salmonella choleraesuis) (102), Salmonella enteritidis (L; p22; 102, and (b); FO; IRA;) Salmonella neuchenopontosa (Salmonella newington) (E34), Salmonella schumuleri (Salmonella schottmulleri) (31; 102, and (b); f0; 14) salmonella typhi (Salmonella typhi) (163; 175; ViI, respectively; ViVI; 8; 23; 25; 46; 175; F0) serratia marcescens (S24VA), Shigella Shigella (Shigella dysenteriae), (S24B)P2; 2; 37) shigella flexneri (Sf6), staphylococcus aureus (staphylococcus aureus) (K; p1; p14; UC 18; 15; 17; 29; 42D, a first electrode; 47; 52; 53; 79; 80; 81; 83A; 92; the length of the Tport,) Streptococcus pneumoniae (Streptococcus pneumoniae) (Dp-1; cp-1; HB-3; EJ-1; MM 1; VO1), Streptococcus pyogenes (Streptococcus pyogenes), (S.pyogenes)1A; 1B; t12; 12/12, respectively; 113; 120 of a solvent; 124; p58; h4489a), Vibrio cholerae (Vibrio cholerae) (138; 145; 149; 163) and Yersinia pestis (Yersinia pestis) (a 1122; r; y; p1). Additional information is provided in U.S. patent publication No. 2009-0155768.

In particular, tables 1-3 provide representative examples of specific host-specific bacteriophages and their specific hosts, including receptors that they mediate their effects. See also Bertozzi et al, FEMS Microbiology Letters, 363,1-11,2016.

TABLE 1 receptors in the cell wall of gram-positive bacteria. Host names are sorted alphabetically.

Figure BDA0002185536470000211

TABLE 2 receptors in the cell wall of gram-negative bacteria. Host names are sorted alphabetically.

TABLE 3 receptors in cell complexes other than cell walls. Host names are sorted alphabetically.

Figure BDA0002185536470000231

D. Phage packaging sites

The phage packaging site is a specific DNA sequence on the phage genome for genome packaging into a viral particle. The plasmid is engineered to contain a phage packaging site, allowing the plasmid to be packaged into transduction particles. Host-specific phages (and their packaging sites) include, but are not limited to, SPP1(SPP1 pac site), P1(P1 pac site), T1(T1 pac site), T7(T7 concatemer joining), lambda (cos site), mu (mu pac site), P22(P22 pac site),

Figure BDA0002185536470000232

(

Figure BDA0002185536470000233

pac site), Sf6 (S)f6 pac site), 149(149pac site), and A1122 (A1122-concatemer junction). For most phages, the packaging site is called the pac site. In some cases, the packaging site is referred to as concatemer conjugation (e.g., T7 concatemer conjugation). In each case, the packaging site is different from the adjacent sequences naturally occurring in the phage genome.

For some phages, the packaging site may be unknown. In these cases, the pac site can be determined by the nature of the plasmid packaging that contains the functional phage pac site. For example, the DNA sequences necessary for phage lambda packaging are determined by incorporating small restriction fragments of lambda phage genomic DNA into plasmids (Hohn et al, PNAS USA 80: 7456-. After introduction of the in vivo packaging strain, the efficiency of packaging/transduction was assessed quantitatively. Using a similar strategy, the pac sites of many phages were determined: lambda (Miwa et al, Gene 20: 267-279, 1982); mu (Croenen et al, Virology 144: 520-522, 1985); filamentous phages including f1, fd, M13, and Ike (Russel et al, J Virol., 63: 3284-3295, 1989); p22(Petri et al, Gene 88: 47-55,1990; Wu et al, mol. Microbiol 45: 1631-1646, 2002); t7(Chung et al, J Mol Biol 216: 927-938,1990) and T3(Hashimoto et al, Virology 187: 788-795, 1992).

Embodiments of the method include phage packaging sequences and functional fragments thereof. These nucleic acid embodiments can be, for example, at least 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 125, 150, 175, 200, 250, 300, 350, 400, 450, 500, 550, 600, 650, 800, 900, as long as can be packaged into a phage such as a phage, thereby producing a functional transduction particle). Incorporating into the plasmid a nucleic acid comprising a phage packaging site or a fragment thereof.

E. Marker gene constructs

Gene technology is widely used to monitor cellular gene expression (Naylor et al, Biochem Pharm 58: 749-757, 1990). Preferably, the marker molecule is a gene encoding a detectable product (e.g., a protein or an enzyme). Particularly preferably, the marker is a molecule that is not naturally expressed by the bacteriophage or bacterium. For example, the marker may be a heterologous eukaryotic protein, a protein of a different bacterial species, or a viral protein.

In one embodiment, the marker is an antigen, an enzyme, an antibody or fragment thereof, and an aptamer. As used herein, the term "antigen" refers to a molecule comprising one or more epitopes (linear, conformational or both) that promote specific binding to a binding ligand (e.g., an antibody). The term "antigen" may also refer to antibodies (e.g., anti-idiotypic antibodies or fragments thereof), as well as to synthetic peptide mimotopes that can mimic an antigen or antigenic determinant (epitope). The term "antigen" may also refer to an oligonucleotide or polynucleotide that expresses an antigen or antigenic determinant in vivo. As used herein, the term "epitope" generally refers to a site on an antigen that is recognized by an antibody or T cell receptor. It may be a short peptide derived from or as part of a protein antigen. However, the term is also intended to include peptides having glycopeptide and carbohydrate epitopes. Several different epitopes may be carried by a single antigenic molecule. The term "epitope" also includes modified amino acid sequences or carbohydrates that stimulate a response that recognizes the entire organism.

In another embodiment, the marker is an antibody. The term "antibody" includes whole antibody molecules as well as antigen-binding fragments thereof. Antibodies include IgG, IgA, IgM, IgE, IgD, and antibody variants, such as single chain antibodies (scFv). Suitable antibody fragments comprise an antigen binding site and thus include, but are not limited to, Fv, Fab and F (ab)2 fragments. The antibody may be a polyclonal antibody or a monoclonal antibody. In a preferred embodiment, the antibody is a monoclonal antibody. Chimeric or synthetic antibodies are also included. In a particularly preferred embodiment, the antibody is an scFv that specifically binds to an antigen of interest. The term "specifically binds" refers to the binding level of an antibody to a particular target epitope ("signal") being higher than to other non-targets ("noise"). Specific detection is achieved when the signal-to-noise ratio for detection is at least 0.6-fold, 0.7-fold, 0.8-fold, 0.9-fold, 1-fold (100% increase), 1.5-fold, 3-fold, 5-fold, 10-fold, 20-fold, 50-fold, 70-fold, 100-fold or more. Methods for preparing and characterizing Antibodies are well known in the art (see, e.g., Lane et al, "Antibodies: A Laboratory Manual," Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1988).

In yet another embodiment, the marker is an aptamer. The term "aptamer" as used herein refers to single stranded dna (ssdna) or RNA with high specificity and affinity for a particular material. Immunoassay methods are expensive and slow due to the limitations of making expensive antibody reagents. On the other hand, since aptamers are synthesized using a relatively simple method, and cells, proteins, and small organic materials can be target materials, a new detection method using aptamers can be developed, and the specificity and stability thereof are comparable to those of developed antibodies. In view of these advantages, the DNA aptamer can be used for specific detection of protein markers. It is generally accepted that aptamers specific for their binding to polypeptides can be synthesized and/or identified by in vitro evolution methods. Methods for preparing and characterizing aptamers, including by in vitro evolution methods, are well known in the art (e.g., U.S. patent No. 7,939,313).

The methods comprise, in part, determining the presence (or absence) or level (e.g., concentration) or activity (e.g., enzymatic activity) of at least one marker or indicator in a sample. As used herein, the term "marker" or "indicator" refers to a nucleotide sequence encoding a nucleic acid (e.g., mRNA), peptide, or protein that allows for the determination or confirmation that the vector has been properly transfected or transduced and that its sequence is properly expressed. The marker may be a nucleotide sequence encoding a protein or a gene encoding antibiotic resistance, which is used to select cells carrying the vector. As used herein, the term "detecting the presence of at least one marker" includes determining the presence of each marker of interest by using any quantitative or qualitative test known to those skilled in the art. In certain instances, qualitative assays to determine the presence or absence of a particular trait, variable, genotype, and/or biochemical or serological substance (e.g., protein or antibody) are suitable for detecting each marker of interest. In certain other cases, quantitative assays to determine the presence or absence of DNA, RNA, protein, antibody, or activity are suitable for detecting each marker of interest. As used herein, the term "detecting the level of at least one marker" includes determining the level of each marker of interest by using any direct or indirect quantitative assay known to those skilled in the art. In certain cases, quantitative assays that determine the relative or absolute amount of, for example, DNA, RNA, protein, antibody, or activity are suitable for detecting the level of each marker of interest. One skilled in the art will appreciate that any assay that can be used to detect the level of a marker can also be used to detect the presence or absence of a marker.

In some embodiments, the marker is a reporter molecule, which may indicate its presence, for example, by its luminescent properties or its ability to undergo an enzymatic reaction. In another embodiment, the marker is conjugated to a reporter molecule to indicate the level or activity of the marker. In the latter case, the reporter may be an antibody or ligand that binds to the marker protein.

(i) Report body

In one embodiment, the reporter molecule is a gene, referred to as a reporter gene, that encodes for the expression of a detectable protein. Commonly used reporter genes include Chloramphenicol Acetyltransferase (CAT), 13-galactosidase, luciferase, alkaline phosphatase, and Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP). In general, reporter genes have the advantage of low background activity and sensitive signal detection after gene expression. For example, the development of luciferase and GFP as non-invasive markers of gene expression, combined with the ease of detection using a sensitive Charge Coupled Device (CCD) imaging camera and a fluorescence microscope, allows temporal and spatial information about gene expression even at the single cell level.

A review of luciferase genes and their use as reporter genes provides Vibrio harveyi (Vibrio harveyi) (accession numbers M10961 and AAA88685), Vibrio harveyi (accession numbers M10961 and AAA88686), Vibrio harveyi (accession numbers M28815 and AAA27531), Vibrio fischeri (Vibrio fischeri) (accession numbers X06758 and CAA29931), Vibrio fischeri (accession numbers X06797 and CAA29932), Vibrio fischeri (accession numbers AF170104 (including variants), Photorhabdus luminescens (accession numbers M62917), beidou firefly (photoinus pyralis) (M15077 and AAA29795), Luciola prolifera (luciole creucite) (accession numbers M26194 and AAA29135), rhabdoviridae (virgulia virgifera), rhabdominae (vactoria virgifera) (accession numbers E2568, M25719, AAA 2731, AAA 27718), Aequorea 2719, AAA 2719); oplophorus gracilorystis (accession numbers AB030246, BAB13776, AB030245 and BAB 13775); gill of mie kidney (Renilla muellii) (accession numbers AY015988 and AAG 54094); and Renilla (Renilla reniformis) (accession numbers M63501 and AAA29804) and a list of known luciferase genes, cdnas, proteins and corresponding GENBANK accession numbers. See green et al, Luminescence 17: 43-74,2002). Greenr also provides a number of constructs and vectors that can be used for imaging (see table 2, pages 48-52). These vectors are suitable for expression in Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli and other bacteria. Among the known luciferases are prokaryotic (Lux) and eukaryotic (Luc, Ruc and their regulatory proteins), both of which are commonly used for imaging luciferase expression in living cells.

In another embodiment, the reporter molecule comprises a β -galactosidase reporter gene that is expressed in bacteria (Miller et al, Experiments in Molecular Genetics, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.; Sambrook et al, Molecular Cloning, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.). Beta-galactosidase activity expressed by bacterial colonies was detected by blue coloration on media containing X-Gal (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside). Chloramphenicol Acetyltransferase (CAT) is also suitable for use as a reporter gene in bacteria. CAT is encoded by a bacterial drug resistance gene (Kondo et al, JBacterid 88: 1266-. It inactivates chloramphenicol by acetylating the drug at one or both of the two hydroxyl groups. In a typical CAT assay, cell extracts are incubated in a reaction mixture containing 14C-or 3H-labeled chloramphenicol and n-butyryl-CoA. CAT transferred the n-butyryl moiety of the cofactor to chloramphenicol. The reaction product was extracted with xylene and n-butyrylchloromycin partitioned primarily into the xylene phase, while unmodified chloramphenicol remained primarily in the aqueous phase. The distribution of radiolabeled chloramphenicol into the xylene phase was measured using a scintillation counter.

The bacterial alkaline phosphatase encoded by the phoA of Escherichia coli is enzymatically active only when it is transported into the periplasmic space through the cell membrane (Gibson et al, Appl and Env Microbiol 68: 928-932, 2002). This property has been used for molecular sensors that engineer PhoA proteins into subcellular localization. Another bacterial alkaline phosphatase (PhoZ) derived from the gram-positive bacterium enterococcus faecalis (Lee et al, J Bacteriol 181: 5790-. PhoZ's alkaline phosphatase activity, like PhoA's alkaline phosphatase activity, is dependent on its export from the cytoplasm. In the alkaline phosphatase assay, alkaline phosphatase hydrolyzes a substrate such as 4-nitrophenyl phosphate (4NPP) to produce a chromogen (e.g., 4-nitrophenol, 4 NP).

Reporter genes allow simpler procedures (e.g., reduced purification or cell lysis), they are amenable to large-scale, high-throughput screening measurements, and they are compatible with bacterial systems. The reporter gene may be a naturally occurring gene or a gene produced by genetic manipulation, such as recombinant DNA techniques or mutagenesis. A reporter gene is a nucleic acid segment that contains a coding region and any associated expression sequences, such as a promoter, translation initiation sequences, and regulatory sequences.

(ii) Bacterial specific promoters

The reporter gene is typically linked to a promoter sequence that controls and directs RNA synthesis. It will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that the promoter sequence may be selected from a wide variety of bacterial genes expressed by various bacterial species. The promoter is selected based on the target bacteria to be detected. For a review of strategies to achieve high levels of gene expression in e.coli, see Makrides et al, Microbiol Rev 60: 512-538,1996. An exemplary promoter sequence that is useful in E.coli is the T7 promoter, but any promoter or enhancer that is functional in prokaryotic cells may be used. Useful promoters include, but are not limited to, the lac promoter (E.coli), the trp promoter (E.coli), the araBAD promoter (E.coli), the lac hybrid promoter (E.coli), the trc hybrid promoter (E.coli), PL (X), SP6, and T7.

The promoter sequence is selected based on its ability to achieve detectable expression levels in the pathogenic bacterium of interest. In a preferred embodiment, the reporter gene is preferably coupled to a promoter obtained from the pathogenic bacterial host to be detected. Constitutive promoters express the reporter at a constant rate regardless of physiological requirements or substrate concentration. Alternatively, it may be advantageous to use an inducible promoter to control the timing of reporter gene expression. For inducible promoters such as the lac and trp operons, expression is usually repressed and can be induced at the desired time. In the absence of lactose, the lac promoter is repressed by the lac repressor. Induction can be achieved by the addition of lactose or IPTG, thereby preventing binding of the repressor to the lac operon. Similarly, the lip promoter is negatively regulated by the tryptophan-repressor complex that binds to the trp operon. For the trp operon, gene expression can be induced by removal of tryptophan or by addition of β -indoleacrylic acid.

(iii) Cell-specific origin of replication

The origins of replication used in the plasmids may be medium copy numbers, such as the colE1 ori from the pBR322 plasmid (15-20 copies per cell) or the R6K plasmid (15-20 copies per cell), or they may be high copy numbers, such as the pUCooris (500-700 copies per cell), the pGEM oris (400 copies per cell), the pTZ oris (1000 copies per cell) or the pbluescript ori (500 copies per cell). The origin of replication may be functional in E.coli or any other prokaryotic species such as B.anthracis or Yersinia pestis (Yersinia pestis).

Plasmid replication is dependent on the host enzyme and plasmid-encoded and plasmid-controlled cis and trans determinants. For example, some plasmids have determinants that are recognized in almost all gram-negative bacteria and function correctly in every host during replication initiation and regulation. Other plasmids have this ability only in some bacteria (Kues et al, Microbiol Rev 53: 491-516, 1989). The plasmid replicates by three general mechanisms, theta-type, strand displacement and rolling circle (reviewed by Del Solar et al, Microbio and Mollec Biol Rev 62: 434-464, 1998).

For replication by a theta-type mechanism, the origin of replication can be defined as (i) the smallest cis-acting region that can support autonomous replication of the plasmid, (ii) the region where the DNA strand melts to initiate the replication process, or (iii) the base at which leader strand synthesis begins. The origin of replication comprises the sites required for the interaction of the plasmid and/or host encoded proteins. Plasmids that undergo theta-type replication also include pPS10, RK2 (containing oriV), RP4, R6K (containing oriy), ColE1, and CoIE 2. ColE1 is a prototype of a class of small multicopy plasmids that replicate by a theta-type mechanism. The origin of replication of C61E1 spans an approximately 1kb region (Del Solar et al, 1998).

An example of plasmid replication by a strand displacement mechanism is the hybrid plasmid of the IncQ family, the prototype of which is RSF 1010. Members of this family require three plasmid-encoded proteins to initiate DNA replication. These proteins promote initiation at complex regions of origin (complex origin regions) and replication proceeds in either direction by strand displacement mechanisms. When the RSF110 replication proteins (RepA, RepB and RepC) are provided in trans by the second plasmid, the origin of replication is defined as the smallest region capable of supporting bidirectional replication. The minimal ori region consists of three identical 20-bp repeats plus a 174bp region containing a GC-rich stretch (28bp) and an AT-rich stretch (31bp) (Del Solar et al, 1998).

Replication by the Rolling Circle (RC) mechanism is unidirectional and is considered an asymmetric process because the synthesis of the leading strand and the synthesis of the following strand are uncoupled. The molecular mechanisms involved in RC replication were studied mainly with staphylococcal plasmids pT181, pC221, pUBHO, pC194 and streptococcal plasmid pMV158 and its Amob derivativespLS 1. Other plasmids or phages that undergo RC replication include, but are not limited to pS194, fd,pE194 and pFX2(Del Solar et al, 1998).

Prokaryotes have circular chromosomal DNA molecules, usually with a single origin of replication. For example, the chromosomal origin of replication of E.coli and other bacteria is called oniC. The present methods contemplate the use of species-specific plasmid DNA (e.g., ColE1, R1, pT181, etc., discussed above), slave phage (e.g., pT181, etc.) known in the artAnd M13) and an origin of replication identified from a bacterial chromosomal origin of replication (e.g., oriC).

(iv) Antibiotic resistance gene

The plasmid DNA of the transduction particle optionally has an antibiotic resistance gene to facilitate molecular biological cloning of the plasmid and to allow selection of bacteria transformed by the plasmid. Antibiotic resistance genes are well known in the art and include, but are not limited to, ampicillin resistance (Ampr), chloramphenicol resistance (Cmr), tetracycline resistance (Tetr), kanamycin resistance (Kanr), hygromycin resistance (hyg or hph genes), and zeomycin (Zeor) resistance. Preferably, the antibiotic resistance gene protects the bacterium from the antimicrobial or cytotoxic effects of a drug other than (or different from) the drug whose resistance or susceptibility is being tested for. In another embodiment, the antibiotic resistance gene protects the bacterium from the antimicrobial or cytotoxic effects of the same drug as the drug whose resistance or susceptibility is being tested for.

F. Method for preparing transduction particles

The transduction particle or recombinant phage used in the method is obtained by modifying a naturally occurring phage to carry a gene capable of converting the target bacterium into a readily recognizable phenotype (hereinafter referred to as a reporter gene). The transduction particle must be capable of specifically introducing the reporter gene into the target bacterial host in a manner such that the bacterial host can express the gene function in a detectable manner. A large number of phage exist, and can be selected for modification based on the desired host range and the ability of the phage to carry and transduce the gene of interest. In particular, the phage must be large enough to accommodate the reporter gene, the relevant promoter region, the phage packaging site, and any other DNA regions that may be included. The modified phage typically retains the normal host range specificity of the unmodified phage, although some change in specificity is acceptable, so long as it does not affect the ability to identify the selected target bacterium.

The phage to be modified may be mild or toxic, preferably mild. Modification of the phage results in transduction particles that are still capable of introducing the reporter gene into the target bacterial host. The reporter gene is part of a plasmid or other self-replicating episomal gene unit that is maintained and expressed in the infected host.

Transduction of the reporter gene may be by transient expression of the reporter gene (i.e., expression of the reporter gene that is not stably inherited by the cell). In this case, the DNA transduced by the phage may not be present completely during the entire test. However, transcription of the reporter gene transduced by the phage is efficient enough before the DNA is degraded to ensure that the bacteria assemble a functional reporter gene at the end of the test period. Thus, even if bacteria degrade phage DNA, bacteria can be detected by this assay.

Phages useful in this method can be obtained from a collection of microorganisms, such as the american type culture collection, p.o. box 1549, Manassas, VA., 20108, USA. Virulent phages may be obtained as a bacteria-free lysate, whereas lysogenic phages may generally be obtained as infected host cells. Wild-type phage obtained from any source can be modified by conventional recombinant DNA techniques to introduce a desired reporter gene capable of producing a detectable target phenotype. Prior to introduction, the reporter gene of interest is combined with the promoter region on a suitable gene cassette. The gene cassette can be constructed in a suitable host (e.g., E.coli) by conventional recombinant DNA techniques. The reporter gene and promoter regions should be selected so that both function in the target host, and the cassette may optionally include a second reporter gene, such as antibiotic resistance, heavy metal resistance, etc., to facilitate in vitro manipulation.

The reporter gene (or genes, if not a single gene system) is capable of expressing a screenable phenotype in the target bacterial host. As used hereinafter, the phrase screenable phenotype means a characteristic or trait that allows cells expressing the phenotype to be distinguished from other cells not expressing the phenotype, even if all cells are normally grown and propagated in mixed culture. That is, the detection of a characteristic or trait can be performed while the infected target cells are present in a mixed population of viable, usually proliferating, non-target bacteria that do not express the phenotype. Preferably, the screenable phenotype comprises a visually detectable trait, i.e. a trait that can be observed directly or indirectly in a mixed population of target cells and non-target cells. Phenotypes are generally not selectable, i.e., a phenotype that provides survival or preferential growth under specific conditions (positive selection) or a phenotype that provides growth inhibition or killing under specific conditions. The method does not require that the target bacteria present in the sample be separated from or enriched relative to non-target bacteria that may be present in the sample, as the trait is observable when the target bacteria comprise only a portion of the live bacteria present.

The reporter gene may itself encode a screenable phenotype, or may be part of a multigene system encoding that phenotype, with other genes present in or separately introduced into the host to be tested. For example, the transduction particle may carry a lacZa gene, which requires the deletion of a complementary lacZp gene or lacZAM15 in the host for expression.

Suitable screenable phenotypes include bioluminescence, fluorescence, enzyme-catalyzed color generation (e.g., using alkaline phosphatase), and the like. Each of these phenotypes can be observed by conventional visualization techniques that provide the chemical reagents necessary to complete the signal generating reaction. Preferred is the use of an immunoassay, and more particularly a lateral flow immunoassay for the detection of a heterologous enzyme or protein or for the detection of a molecule co-expressed with an enzyme or protein, wherein the co-expressed molecule serves as an indicator of a functional expression system.

For phage, it is possible to package a plasmid or reporter cassette by ligating a phage packaging site in a DNA construct with the plasmid or cassette. The packaging site can be obtained from the phage genome and cloned into a plasmid carrying the reporter gene, the promoter region and optionally a second reporter. The plasmid may then be transferred to a suitable bacterial host. The bacterial host then produces transduction particles with the plasmid and/or marker gene cassettes packaged within the phage capsid, which are capable of inserting the plasmid DNA into bacteria of its host range. Plasmids are transferred into the desired phage by infecting the appropriate host with both the plasmid and phage. Host cells were incubated and the transduced particles were collected. A portion of the phage will carry the plasmid. The transduction particles can be separated from the phage by conventional techniques.

The host-specific phage packaging site is substantially separated from its adjacent native sequences in the phage genome. As used herein, the term "substantially isolated" with respect to phage packaging sites means that they are not in their natural environment. That is, the packaging site is not a naturally occurring full-length phage genome nucleic acid sequence. The packaging sites can be isolated from the full-length phage genome sequence by experimental techniques, such as cloning or amplification using restriction endonucleases and by polymerase chain reaction. The packaging sites may also be produced synthetically.

A phage packaging site is a nucleic acid fragment that lacks, in whole or in part, sequences normally associated with it in nature, or sequences as they occur in nature, but with heterologous sequences bound to it. It is a fragment isolated from the phage genome.

As used herein, the phrase "functional equivalent" in the context of a phage packaging site refers to a packaging site that performs qualitatively the same function as a wild-type phage packaging site. Thus, if an isolated phage packaging site directs the packaging of DNA, a DNA fragment is a functional equivalent if it also directs the packaging of DNA in the same manner. Fragments are not necessarily quantitatively equivalent to a functional equivalent according to this method. Thus, a phage packaging site having nucleotide substitutions, deletions and/or additions can be a functional equivalent of an isolated phage packaging site.

G. Methods of using bacteriophage

The foregoing embodiments can be implemented using transducing phage particles consisting of a completely intact phage or a variant thereof containing minimal structural elements to allow transduction of the particle into a host cell. In some cases, it may be possible to infect a biological sample and directly observe changes and phenotypes, but in other cases it may be preferable to first prepare a large culture of the bacteria present in the sample. The methods used to obtain the samples and, if necessary, to prepare the bulk culture vary according to the nature of the biological sample, and suitable techniques for preparing the various sample types are described in detail in standard microbiological and bacteriological textbooks, such as Bergey's Manual of definitive Bacteriology (8)thed.), Buchanan and Gibbons (eds.) Williams&Wilkens co., Baltimore (1974); manual of Methods for general Bacteriology, Gerhardt et al (ed.), am. Soc. microbiology, Wash. (1981); and Manual of Clinical Microbiology (8th ed.), Patrick, R et al (eds.), am. Soc. Microbiology, Washington (2003).

The phage itself can be added to the sample in various forms. It may be added in the dry state. The phage may be mixed or suspended in a liquid reagent mixture. It can be suspended in a vial to which the sample is added. It may also take any other suitable form. The phage added to the sample is sometimes referred to herein as a "parent phage". Once contacted with the phage, the sample is referred to as a phage-exposed sample.

The phage-exposed sample can be incubated for a predetermined time. If present in the exposed sample, incubation may be continued for a sufficient time to allow production of the phage marker in the infected target bacteria. The phage-exposed sample is subjected to conditions conducive to phage infection by the target bacteria. This can be achieved in a number of ways. For example, a parent phage may be mixed into an agent that, when added to a sample, produces a test sample that is favorable for infection. Samples can be prepared in many different ways to establish conditions favorable for phage infection.

Assuming the target bacteria are present in the sample, the test sample will contain the phage markers. The parent phage infects the target bacteria by attaching itself to the cell wall of the target bacteria and injecting viral nucleic acid to produce the infecting bacteria. The recombinant phage marker genes are then expressed in large amounts in the infected bacteria. If the bacterium is metabolically active, e.g. growing or dividing, each progeny will contain additional copies of the marker gene (or be infected by the phage), thus generating a greater signal. Conversely, if the bacteria are quiescent or dead, a smaller signal is produced.

Markers can be analyzed by performing multiple processing steps. In one embodiment, the method comprises lysing the bacteria. In one embodiment, the microbial lysozyme is added to the phage-exposed sample. In one embodiment, lysing comprises adding chloroform to the phage-exposed sample, treating the phage-exposed sample with acid, or otherwise physically treating the phage-exposed sample.

In contrast to other methods, there is no need to produce progeny phage, rupture the host, release the progeny phage into the test sample, and subsequent rounds of bacterial infection. Furthermore, while many prior art methods rely on the detection of intact progeny phages, embodiments of the present disclosure relate to the detection of overexpressed marker proteins that are not naturally expressed by the bacterium or phage or bacterial infected host, e.g., human. In other embodiments, the product of the marker gene may confer certain phenotypes, such as antibiotic resistance or enhanced growth properties, which may be functionally screened.

In one embodiment, the phage marker is an indirect indicator of the presence of the target bacteria in the sample. In the case where the phage marker is a component of a parent phage, the initial concentration of parent phage in the exposed sample can be controlled such that the background signal generated is not detectable in the assay. Thus, if the target bacteria are not present in the sample, no infection occurs, no recombinant phage marker genes are expressed, and no new phage markers are synthesized. In one embodiment, a negative control is performed using a control sample known to lack the type of target bacteria to confirm that the phage used does not produce a background signal in the assay. Other aspects of the disclosure may provide a negative control for identifying a background signal that can be distinguished from any signal produced by an exposed sample comprising the target bacteria.

In certain embodiments, once the biological sample is prepared (with or without growth of a large culture), it is typically exposed to the transduction particle without agitation under conditions that promote binding of the particle to the bacteria and injection of genetic material for a sufficient time to allow infection (e.g., 15 minutes to 120 minutes), typically at a temperature that supports rapid bacterial growth (e.g., 35 ℃ to 40 ℃). Following infection, the cells are incubated to allow expression of the reporter gene and reporter gene expression is detected as described below.

The method is applicable to homogeneous isolates as well as heterogeneous bacterial samples, including, for example, multiple bacterial species. The term "plurality" means two or more units, e.g., bacterial species, although the individual units need not differ structurally and/or functionally. In certain embodiments, the sample may be screened to provide a homogenous bacterial population, e.g., using a particular nutrient medium adapted to the particular population.

In contrast to conventional phage transduction techniques, which aim to produce homogeneous colonies of transduced bacterial cells, the method does not require isolation of the transduced bacteria in any way. In contrast, a screenable phenotype, e.g., a visually observable trait, conferred by a reporter gene or product thereof can be detected in an unselected portion of a biological sample in which viable, typically proliferating, non-target bacteria are present. Screening can be performed without selection, as there is no need to isolate the transduced bacteria.

In some embodiments, the method comprises analyzing the sample for the presence or absence of a marker nucleic acid or product thereof. Suitable methods for detecting marker nucleic acids or products thereof are known in the art and may and will vary depending on the nature of the sample.

In some embodiments, the method for determining the susceptibility or resistance of a bacterium to an antibiotic is provided by performing the antibiotic treatment, phage transformation, and detection steps described above. These steps of antibiotic treatment and phage transformation can be performed in any order or simultaneously. In one embodiment, the steps of antibiotic treatment and phage transformation are performed sequentially. The term "sequentially" as used herein means that the steps are performed sequentially, e.g., at one or more intervals of minutes, hours, days, or weeks. The steps may be performed in a regular repetitive loop, if appropriate. In another embodiment, the antibiotic treatment and phage transformation steps are performed together, followed by the determination step.

H. Detection method

The method of detecting the reporter gene or its product may be indirect or direct. Indirect detection may involve separating the reporter gene or its product from other components in the sample, or concentrating the reporter gene or its product in the sample and then detecting the reporter gene or its product in the purified or concentrated sample. The reporter gene or its product can be detected in a released state (e.g., in phage-containing media) or in a bound form (e.g., contained within the bacterium in the cytosol or integrated into the genome). In some cases, the reporter is a molecule expressed on the surface of the bacterium that allows its detection without lysis. In other embodiments, the reporter can be a protein having enzymatic activity, e.g., CAT activity or AP activity, as previously described. In this case, enzymatic techniques are used to determine reporter activity. In yet another embodiment, the reporter may be a protein that exhibits antigenicity to a known antibody or to a known aptamer or to a binding partner of the protein.

In a preferred embodiment, the reporter gene or product thereof is detected directly by detecting the presence of the protein product or protein fragment of the gene (e.g., a peptide containing an antigenic determinant to which an antibody specifically binds). In this regard, epitope binding agents such as antibodies, aptamers, or other molecular ligands that recognize the reporter protein or fragment thereof can be used to detect the reporter protein or fragment thereof. In an exemplary embodiment, the antibody or antigen binding fragment thereof is used to detect the presence of a reporter protein or fragment thereof. In other embodiments, the antibody can be used to detect a product resulting from the biosynthetic activity of the reporter protein, e.g., where the reporter is a protease with specific activity for another protein, the digestion product of the second protein is detected.

In one embodiment, the reporter protein or fragment thereof is detected using mass spectrometry. In particular, techniques that link a chromatography step with a mass spectrometry step may be used. In general, the presence of a reporter protein or fragment thereof can be determined using liquid chromatography followed by mass spectrometry.

In some embodiments, the liquid chromatography is High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC). Non-limiting examples of HPLC may include partition chromatography, normal phase chromatography, displacement chromatography, reverse phase chromatography, size exclusion chromatography, ion exchange chromatography, bioaffinity chromatography, aqueous normal phase chromatography, or ultrafast liquid chromatography. In one embodiment, the liquid chromatography may be ultra-fast liquid chromatography.

In some embodiments, the mass spectrum may be a constant neutral loss mass spectrum. In other embodiments, the mass spectrometry can be tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). In various embodiments, the mass spectrum can be matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI). In a particular embodiment, the mass spectrum may be electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS).

In an exemplary embodiment, the method comprises liquid chromatography followed by tandem mass spectrometry. In a particularly exemplary embodiment, the method comprises liquid chromatography followed by tandem mass spectrometry as described in the examples. In another exemplary embodiment, the method comprises liquid chromatography followed by constant neutral loss mass spectrometry. In a particularly exemplary embodiment, the method comprises liquid chromatography followed by constant neutral loss mass spectrometry as described in the examples. In yet another exemplary embodiment, the method comprises liquid chromatography followed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS).

In each of the above embodiments, liquid chromatography followed by mass spectrometry can be used to determine the presence of the reporter protein or fragment thereof in the sample, or liquid chromatography followed by mass spectrometry can be used to determine the presence and amount of the reporter protein or fragment thereof in the sample. In a preferred embodiment, liquid chromatography followed by mass spectrometry can be used to determine the presence of a reporter protein or fragment thereof in a sample.

In general, an epitope-based binding agent method of assessing the presence or amount of a reporter protein or fragment thereof comprises contacting a sample comprising the reporter protein or fragment thereof with an epitope binding agent specific for the reporter protein or fragment thereof under conditions effective to allow formation of a complex between the epitope binding agent and the reporter protein or fragment thereof. Methods based on epitope binding agents can be performed in solution, or the epitope binding agent or sample can be immobilized on a solid surface. Non-limiting examples of suitable surfaces include microtiter plates, test tubes, beads, resins, and other polymers.

As understood by those skilled in the art, epitope binding agents can be attached to a substrate in a wide variety of ways. Epitope binding agents can be synthesized first and subsequently attached to a substrate, or can be synthesized directly on a substrate. The matrix and epitope binding agent can be derivatized with chemical functional groups to subsequently link the two. For example, the matrix may be derivatized with chemical functional groups including, but not limited to, amino groups, carboxyl groups, oxo groups, or thiol groups. Using these functional groups, the epitope binding agents can be directly linked using the functional groups or indirectly linked using linkers.

Epitope binding agents may also be non-covalently attached to a substrate. For example, biotinylated epitope binding agents can be prepared that can bind to streptavidin covalently coated surfaces, resulting in attachment. Alternatively, epitope binding agents can be synthesized on the surface using techniques such as photopolymerization and photolithography. Additional methods for attaching epitope binding agents to solid surfaces and methods for synthesizing biomolecules on a substrate are well known in the art, the VLSIPS technique from Affymetrix (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No.6,566,495, and Rockett et al, Xenobiotica 30 (2): 155-.

To allow for the formation of a complex between the epitope binding agent and the reporter protein or fragment thereof, the individual components are incubated under effective conditions for a sufficient period of time to allow the epitope binding agent to bind to any antigen present. Thereafter, the complex may be washed to remove/reduce non-specific binding, and the complex may be detected by any method well known in the art. Methods of detecting complexes between epitope binding agents and reporter proteins or fragments thereof are generally based on the detection of labels or markers. As used herein, the term "label" refers to any substance attached to an epitope binding agent or other matrix material, wherein the substance is detectable by a detection method. Non-limiting examples of suitable labels include luminescent molecules, chemiluminescent molecules, fluorescent dyes, fluorescence quenchers, colored molecules, radioisotopes, scintillators, biotin, avidin, streptavidin, protein a, protein G, antibodies or fragments thereof, polyhistidine, Ni2+, Flag tags, myc tags, heavy metals, and enzymes (including alkaline phosphatase, peroxidase, and luciferase). These methods are well known in the art.

In some embodiments, the complex is detected by an immunoassay. Immunoassays can be performed in a number of different formats. In general, immunoassays can be divided into two categories: competitive immunoassays and non-competitive immunoassays. In a competitive immunoassay, unlabeled analyte in a sample competes with labeled analyte for binding to an epitope binding agent, such as an antibody. Unbound analyte is washed away and bound analyte is measured. In an alternative embodiment of the competitive immunoassay, unlabeled analyte in the sample displaces a labeled epitope binding agent, such as an antibody, from the immobilized analyte. Measuring the amount of displaced antibody as an indication of the amount of analyte in the sample. In a non-competitive immunoassay, an epitope binding agent (e.g., an antibody) is labeled instead of the analyte. Non-competitive immunoassays may use one antibody (e.g., the capture antibody is labeled) or more than one antibody (e.g., at least one unlabeled capture antibody and at least one labeled "capping" or detection antibody). Suitable labels are described above.

In some embodiments, the epitope binding agent-based method is an ELISA. In other embodiments, the epitope binding agent-based method is a radioimmunoassay. In still other embodiments, the epitope binding agent-based method is immunoblotting or western blotting. In various embodiments, the epitope binding agent-based method is Immunohistochemistry (IHC). In an alternative embodiment, the epitope binding agent-based approach is an array. In various embodiments, the epitope binding agent-based method is a lateral flow assay. A lateral flow assay may be a device intended to detect the presence (or absence) of a target analyte in a sample.

A second method for improving the ability to specifically identify bacterial hosts involves the use of immunoadsorption. Immobilized antibodies, including antisera or monoclonal antibodies, are used to specifically capture bacterial cells based on the properties of their cell surface epitopes. The transduction particles can then be used to further detect bacteria, as described above. Suitable materials and methods for immunoadsorption of specific bacterial species and strains on solid phase surfaces are described in Enterobacterial Surface antibodies, methods for Molecular Characterization, Korhonen et al (ed.), Elsevier Science Publishers, Amsterdam (1986).

In another embodiment, the reporter protein or fragment thereof can be detected using a cytometric technique. Although methods for performing bacterial count measurements of cultured bacteria have been reported elsewhere (Martinez et al, Cytometry (1982)3 (2): 129-33; Suller et al, J Antericrob Chemother (1997)40 (1): 77-83; and Roth et al, applied environ Microbiol (1997)63 (6): 2421-31), they do not involve the detection of phage reporter proteins. The cytometric detection methods can be adapted to both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria, such as E.coli (Martinez, supra), Bacillus cereus (Roth, supra), Staphylococcus aureus (Suller et al, J Antinic Chemothers (1997)40 (1): 77-83), Staphylococcus epidermidis (Cohen et al, J Clin Microbiol (1989)27 (6): 1250-6), Streptococcus pyogenes (Cohen, supra), Klebsiella pneumoniae (Cohen, supra), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Cohen, supra), Pseudomonas stutzeri (Cohen, supra), Proteus mirabilis (Cohen, supra), and Enterobacter (Cohen, supra).

In the foregoing embodiments, the method utilizes host-specific recombinant or engineered bacteriophages. For example, genetically modified to infect Yersinia pestis

Figure BDA0002185536470000321

Can be used for specific detection of Yersinia pestis. To detect multiple target bacterial types, one bacteriophage specific to each target bacterial type may be added to a single test sample, or separately to a subset thereof.

Fig. 1 illustrates an exemplary workflow according to one embodiment of the methods described herein. A sample 10 comprising bacteria is obtained. As described above, the sample may be from a subject, from a food product, from the environment, and the like. The sample may be processed or treated as needed or desired. An aliquot of the sample is incubated or cultured in the presence of an antibiotic 12, and optionally, an aliquot of the sample is incubated or cultured in the absence of an antibiotic. Simultaneously or sequentially, the sample aliquot is incubated or cultured with recombinant or engineered phage specific for the bacteria in the sample 12. As described above, the engineered phage comprises a heterologous marker. The resulting culture, produced by incubation with antibiotics and engineered phage, is then analyzed 14 to determine the presence or absence (quantitatively or qualitatively) of the marker and report the results or data 16.

Fig. 2 shows an exemplary workflow according to another embodiment of the method described herein. A sample 20 comprising bacteria is obtained. The sample may be processed or treated if needed or desired. A vessel 22 is prepared containing a fluid medium with and without antibiotics. An aliquot of sample 24 is placed in each container and mixed 26. Each container is then incubated at the desired temperature for the desired time, and in this embodiment, each container is incubated at 35 ℃ for 2 hours (28). The containers may be mixed again after incubation, and then the engineered phage introduced into the containers, mixed (34), and then incubated (36) to produce a secondary culture. Aliquots of the secondary culture are deposited on a lateral flow immunoassay device (38) and then analyzed (40) for the presence or absence (quantitative or qualitative) of the heterologous marker.

The workflow of fig. 1 and 2 is an example of the efficacy of methods and assays for performing the methods and assays described herein to screen candidate antibiotics against a bacterial sample, bacterial strain, or mixture of bacterial strains. Generally, the method comprises contacting a bacterial sample with a test antibiotic to obtain a primary culture and with a medium lacking the test antibiotic to obtain a control primary culture; contacting a specific bacteriophage comprising a nucleic acid sequence encoding expression of a heterologous reporter gene with the primary culture and with a control primary culture to obtain a first secondary culture comprising bacteria treated with a test antibiotic and a second secondary culture comprising bacteria not treated with the test antibiotic; and detecting the level or activity of the reporter gene or product thereof in the first and second secondary cultures, wherein a decrease (or absence) in the level or activity of the reporter gene or product thereof in the first secondary culture as compared to the second secondary culture indicates that the test compound is an antibiotic agent. The method is also useful for screening single test antibiotics against multiple bacterial strains. The method is also useful for Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations (MIC) and/or screening of antibiotics or candidate antibiotics to determine the efficacy of clinical antibiotic compounds.

As used herein, the term "minimum inhibitory concentration" refers to the lowest concentration of antibiotic that inhibits the visible growth of a microorganism. The term also includes the minimum concentration of antibiotic that affects bacterial cell death or inhibits cell wall repair using the methods and assays described herein. In one embodiment, the methods and assays described herein allow for the determination of a minimum inhibitory concentration of an antibiotic or candidate antibiotic against a bacterial strain. In one embodiment, the minimum inhibitory concentration of an antibiotic can be determined by measuring the modulation (e.g., uptake or excretion of a reporter dye, morphological change, metabolic change, etc.) in the response of bacterial cells in a sample exposed to the antibiotic as compared to the same bacterial cells in a sample not exposed to the antibiotic or in a sample exposed to a different concentration of the same antibiotic.

The minimum inhibitory concentration is a clinically relevant value indicative of the minimum effective dose of antibiotic to be administered to the subject to induce bacterial cell death and/or alleviate at least one symptom of the bacteria-mediated disease. Clinically, the minimum inhibitory concentration is used not only to determine the amount of antibiotic that the subject will receive, but also to determine the preferred antibiotic to use. The minimum inhibitory concentration of the candidate antibiotic may also be determined to allow dosing information such as efficacy determinations and clinical trials.

The methods are useful for patient diagnosis because they allow the determination of the susceptibility of bacteria to antibiotics and other antiseptics. By performing a brief incubation of the bacteria with the antibiotic or antiseptic to be screened before exposure to the transduction particle, the metabolic activity of the cell is stopped and the phenotype is prevented from changing. Such a test would be useful after initially confirming the presence of bacteria using transduction particles as described above. Antibiotics and antiseptics determined to be lethal to bacterial infection can then be used to treat the subject. This rapid and early detection of useful antibiotics and antiseptics is very valuable in treating severe bacterial infections.

In one embodiment, a diagnostic method can comprise contacting a sample of a subject having or suspected of being at risk for a bacterial disease with one or more recombinant bacteriophages described herein; detecting and optionally quantifying the presence or absence of a phage-expressed marker; correlating the presence of the marker with a causative agent of the bacterial disease (e.g., staphylococcus aureus), thereby diagnosing the bacterial disease in the subject. By "subject" is meant any member of the phylum chordata, including but not limited to humans and other primates, including non-human primates, such as chimpanzees and other apes and monkey species; farm animals such as cattle, sheep, pigs, goats, and horses; domestic mammals, such as dogs and cats; laboratory animals including rodents such as mice, rats and guinea pigs; birds, including poultry, wild and game birds, such as chickens, turkeys and other gallinaceous birds, ducks, geese, and the like. The term encompasses adult and neonatal individuals.

In certain embodiments, following a positive diagnosis of a bacterial disease, the subject may optionally be treated, managed and followed according to standard clinical procedures. For example, a subject may be treated with an effective amount of an agent, such as an antibiotic. For purposes of the present methods, an "effective amount" of an agent is an amount that produces a response against a pathogenic agent (e.g., staphylococcus aureus) in a subject. In this aspect, a subject having pharyngitis may be treated with penicillin G benzathine penicillin and/or amoxicillin. If the subject is found to be unresponsive to treatment, the pathogenic agent can be analyzed for antibiotic resistance using the methods described above. If a positive identification is made for a resistant strain, the subject may be treated with a second antibiotic agent or a higher dose of antibiotic agent or a combination of two or more antibiotic agents.

Similarly, the method can be used to detect the presence of antibiotics, such as antibiotic residues in animal products. In this method, an extract of the material to be analyzed is added to a culture of a bacterial strain sensitive to said antibiotic, and the mixture is incubated for a predetermined period of time sufficient to kill the strain if a given amount of antibiotic is present. At this point, transduction particles specific for the strain were added and analyzed as described herein. If a given amount of antibiotic is present, cells of the bacterial strain will die and the reading will be negative (i.e., lack of luminescence in the luciferase assay). If a given amount of antibiotic is not present or is below the MIC, the bacteria will survive and the reading will be positive (i.e., luminescent).

In a specific embodiment, a method is provided for determining bacteria that have previously conferred phage specificity that are sensitive to transduction particles. That is, in a first step, the target bacteria are modified (e.g., by transformation) such that they contain or express a cell-specific receptor for the target phage. In a second step, modified (or labeled) bacteria are introduced or mixed into the sample environment where they will be of continued interest. The sample environment may be any environment in which bacteria are present, including outdoors (e.g., soil, air, or water); on a living host (e.g., plant, animal, insect); on equipment (e.g., manufacturing, processing, or packaging equipment); and in clinical samples. Phage assays as described herein are then performed using phage specific for the introduced receptor, and the presence of the labeled bacteria can be monitored or quantified.

The foregoing embodiments are further described with reference to the following non-limiting examples.

Examples

The structures, materials, compositions, and methods described herein are intended to be representative examples of the invention, and it is to be understood that the scope of the invention is not limited by the scope of the examples. One skilled in the art will recognize that variations of the disclosed structures, materials, compositions, and methods may be made to practice the invention, and that such variations are considered to be within the scope of the invention.

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