Microbial Biotechnology (Jul 2019)

Bacteriophages engineered to display foreign peptides may become short‐circulating phages

  • Katarzyna Hodyra‐Stefaniak,
  • Karolina Lahutta,
  • Joanna Majewska,
  • Zuzanna Kaźmierczak,
  • Dorota Lecion,
  • Marek Harhala,
  • Weronika Kęska,
  • Barbara Owczarek,
  • Ewa Jończyk‐Matysiak,
  • Anna Kłopot,
  • Paulina Miernikiewicz,
  • Dominika Kula,
  • Andrzej Górski,
  • Krystyna Dąbrowska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.13414
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
pp. 730 – 741

Abstract

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Summary Bacteriophages draw scientific attention in medicine and biotechnology, including phage engineering, widely used to shape biological properties of bacteriophages. We developed engineered T4‐derived bacteriophages presenting seven types of tissue‐homing peptides. We evaluated phage accumulation in targeted tissues, spleen, liver and phage circulation in blood (in mice). Contrary to expectations, accumulation of engineered bacteriophages in targeted organs was not observed, but instead, three engineered phages achieved tissue titres up to 2 orders of magnitude lower than unmodified T4. This correlated with impaired survival of these phages in the circulation. Thus, engineering of T4 phage resulted in the short‐circulating phage phenotype. We found that the complement system inactivated engineered phages significantly more strongly than unmodified T4, while no significant differences in phages’ susceptibility to phagocytosis or immunogenicity were found. The short‐circulating phage phenotype of the engineered phages suggests that natural phages, at least those propagating on commensal bacteria of animals and humans, are naturally optimized to escape rapid neutralization by the immune system. In this way, phages remain active for longer when inside mammalian bodies, thus increasing their chance of propagating on commensal bacteria. The effect of phage engineering on phage pharmacokinetics should be considered in phage design for medical purposes.