An appraisal of bacteriophages as biocontrol agent in treating E.coli O157:H7 mediated experimental gastroenteritis in mice
Date
2015-04Publisher
© 2015 International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and DevelopmentMetadata
Show full item recordCitation
Mosharraf, F.-B., Ahsan, C. R., Yasmin, M., & Nessa, J. (2015). An appraisal of bacteriophages as biocontrol agent in treating E.coli O157:H7 mediated experimental gastroenteritis in mice. International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Development, 2(4), 606–614. Retrieved from http://www.allsubjectjournal.com/archives/2015/vol2/issue4/66Abstract
The emergence of new pathogenic bacteria resistant to most, if not all, currently existing antimicrobial
agents has become a serious problem in modern medicine, particularly because of the affiliated increase
in immunosuppressed inhabitants worldwide. The recent surfacing of E. coli O157:H7 as a foremost food
pathogen is a lively reminder of its dynamic character. Mounting concerns about drug-resistant
pathogenic bacteria have rekindled interest in alternative treatments of bacterial infections. Prominent
among these alternatives is phage therapy for combating supportive infections. This observation
particularly calls for the in vivo examination of environmental phage candidates to treat stx1A and stx2A
positive Escherichia coli O157:H7 induced experimental diarrhea. Two O157-specific lytic
bacteriophages PAH6 and P2BH2 were isolated from sewage and characterized. Healthy conventional
Swiss albino mice were used for investigating the O157:H7 specific diarrhea applied through three
alternative routes (oral, intramuscular and intraperitoneal).The highest titer of orally added E. coli
0157:H7 was found to be fatal within 24 hrs. A single oral dose of phage strain (1X107 PFUml-1) alone or
in combination was sufficient to rescue 100% of the animals from this lethal challenge in vivo. Finally,
the results obtained in this study suggest that cocktail of two coliphages applied orally for treatment
gastrointestinal infection have good therapeutic potential.
Description
This article was published in the International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Development [© 2015] and The Journal's website is at: http://www.allsubjectjournal.com/archives/2015/vol2/issue4/66Department
Department of Mathematical and Natural Science, BRAC UniversityType
ArticleCollections
- Article [3]