Journal article

Potential for bacteriophage endolysins to supplement or replace antibiotics in food production and clinical care

MJ Love, D Bhandari, RCJ Dobson, C Billington

Antibiotics | MDPI | Published : 2018

Abstract

There is growing concern about the emergence of bacterial strains showing resistance to all classes of antibiotics commonly used in human medicine. Despite the broad range of available antibiotics, bacterial resistance has been identified for every antimicrobial drug developed to date. Alarmingly, there is also an increasing prevalence of multidrug-resistant bacterial strains, rendering some patients effectively untreatable. Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop alternatives to conventional antibiotics for use in the treatment of both humans and food-producing animals. Bacteriophage-encoded lytic enzymes (endolysins), which degrade the cell wall of the bacterial host to release proge..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by New Zealand Royal Society Marsden Fund


Awarded by Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment Smart Ideas grant


Awarded by New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE)


Funding Acknowledgements

This article is supported by ESR SSIF funding. M.L. is supported by an UC Connect scholarship. R.C.J.D. acknowledges the following for funding support, in part: (1) the New Zealand Royal Society Marsden Fund (UOC1506); (2) a Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment Smart Ideas grant (UOCX1706) the Biomolecular Interactions Centre, University of Canterbury.