Potential Applications of Thermophilic Bacteriophages in One Health

Int J Mol Sci. 2023 May 4;24(9):8222. doi: 10.3390/ijms24098222.

Abstract

Bacteriophages have a wide range of applications such as combating antibiotic resistance, preventing food contamination for food safety, and as biomarkers to indirectly assess the quality of water. Additionally, bacteriophage components (endolysins and coat proteins) have a lot of applications in food processing, vaccine design, and the delivery of cargo to the body. Therefore, bacteriophages/components have a multitude of applications in human, plant/veterinary, and environmental health (One Health). Despite their versatility, bacteriophage/component use is mostly limited to temperatures within 4-40 °C. This limits their applications (e.g., in food processing conditions, pasteurization, and vaccine design). Advances in thermophilic bacteriophage research have uncovered novel thermophilic endolysins (e.g., ΦGVE2 amidase and MMPphg) that can be used in food processing and in veterinary medicine. The endolysins are thermostable at temperatures > 65 °C and have broad antimicrobial activities. In addition to thermophilic endolysins, enzymes (DNA polymerase and ligases) derived from thermophages have different applications in molecular biology/biotechnology: to generate DNA libraries and develop diagnostics for human and animal pathogens. Furthermore, coat proteins from thermophages are being explored to develop virus-like particle platforms with versatile applications in human and animal health. Overall, bacteriophages, especially those that are thermophilic, have a plethora of applications in One Health.

Keywords: One Health; bacteriophages; endolysins; food safety; lytic enzymes; thermophilic bacteriophages; vaccines; veterinary medicine; virus-like particles.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bacteriophages* / metabolism
  • Endopeptidases / metabolism
  • Food Contamination
  • Food Safety
  • Humans
  • One Health*
  • Vaccines* / metabolism

Substances

  • Endopeptidases
  • Vaccines