Free online reference management for clinicians and scientists
Recent "phage therapy" articles
- These articles and links have been posted by Connotea users using the tag "phage therapy".
- To add to this collection, or to start your own library:
Watch a short video (2m 41s)
Create a Connotea Community Page about this tag. 

Number of articles per page:
Engineered viruses fight bacteria
Nature News, (02 Mar 2009)
Viruses that target bacteria could help give antibiotics a boost ... Biologists have engineered viruses to weaken the bacteria they infect, leaving the bugs more vulnerable to antibiotics. With more bacteria becoming resistant to the most commonly used antibiotics, the viral approach could extend the useful lifetime of these drugs.
The notion of fighting infection by harnessing the viruses that infect and kill bacteria dates back nearly a century. Doctors in the former Soviet Union routinely prescribed a cocktail of such viruses — called 'bacteriophages' or just 'phages'. But the treatment never caught on in the West, where it was largely abandoned when antibiotics emerged on the scene.
Since that time, researchers have become trapped in an accelerating arms race to develop new drugs against antibiotic-resistant bacteria, leading some to turn to the alternative approach of 'phage therapy'. Several companies are now developing such therapies, and in 2006, the US Food and Drug Administration approved a bacteriophage that could be sprayed onto luncheon meats to kill the bacterium Listeria monocytogenes. This bacterium causes listeriosis — a rare but sometimes fatal infection that can be particularly dangerous for those with a weak immune system, as well as pregnant women and their unborn babies.
<< Prev 0 Showing entries 1 to 2 of 2 total Next 0 >>


