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Enhanced Suppression of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia by a Three-Phage Cocktail: Genomic Insights and Kinetic Profiling

Monsibais, A. N.; Tea, O.; Ghatbale, P.; Phan, J.; Lam, K.; Paulson, M.; Tran, N.; Suder, D. S.; Blanc, A.; Samillano, C.; Suh, J.; Dunham, S. J. B.; Gonen, S.; Pride, D. T.; Whiteson, K.

2024-08-16 microbiology
10.1101/2024.08.14.607921 bioRxiv
Show abstract

In our era of rising antibiotic resistance, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia (STM) is an understudied, gram-negative, aerobic bacterium widespread in the environment and increasingly causing opportunistic infections. Treating STM infections remains difficult, leading to an increase in disease severity and higher hospitalization rates in people with Cystic Fibrosis (pwCF), cancer, and other immunocompromised health conditions. The lack of effective antibiotics has led to renewed interest in phage therapy; however, there is a need for well-characterized phages. In response to an oncology patient with a respiratory infection, we collected 18 phages from Southern California wastewater influent that exhibit different plaque morphology against STM host strain B28B, cultivated from a blood sample. Here, we characterize the genomes and life cycle kinetics of our STM phage collection. We hypothesize that genetically distinct phages give rise to unique lytic life cycles that can enhance bacterial killing when combined into a phage cocktail compared to the individual phages alone. We identified three genetically distinct clusters of phages, and a representative from each group was screened for potential therapeutic use and investigated for infection kinetics. The results demonstrated that the three-phage cocktail significantly suppressed bacterial growth compared to individual phages when observed for 48 hours. We also assessed the lytic impacts of our three-phage cocktail against a collection of 46 STM strains to determine if a multi-phage cocktail can expand the host range of individual phages. Our phages remained strain-specific and infect >50% of tested strains. The multi-phage cocktail maintains bacterial growth suppression and prevents the emergence of phage-resistant strains throughout our 40-hour assay. These findings suggest specialized phage cocktails may be an effective avenue of treatment for recalcitrant STM infections resistant to current antibiotics. IMPORTANCEPhage therapy could provide a vital strategy in the fight against antimicrobial resistance (AMR) bacterial infections; however, significant knowledge gaps remain. This study investigates phage cocktail development for the opportunistic pathogen Stenotrophomonas maltophilia (STM). Our findings contribute novel phages, their lytic characteristics, and limitations when exposed to an array of clinically relevant STM strains. Eighteen bacteriophages were isolated from wastewater influent from Escondido, California, and subjected to genomic analysis. We investigated genetically distinct phages to establish their infection kinetics and developed them into a phage cocktail. Our findings suggest that a genetically distinct STM phage cocktail provides an effective strategy for bacterial suppression of host strain B28B and five other clinically relevant STM strains. Phage therapy against STM remains poorly understood, as only 39 phages have been previously isolated. Future research into the underlying mechanism of how phage cocktails overwhelm the host bacteria will provide essential information that could aid in optimizing phage applications and impact alternative treatment options.

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