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Strategies for developing phages into novel antimicrobial tailocins

Cédric Woudstra, Anders Nørgaard Sørensen, Martine C. Holst Sørensen, Lone Brøndsted

2024Trends in Microbiology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Tailocins are high-molecular-weight bacteriocins produced by bacteria to kill related environmental competitors by binding and puncturing their target. Tailocins are promising alternative antimicrobials, yet the diversity of naturally occurring tailocins is limited. The structural similarities between phage tails and tailocins advocate using phages as scaffolds for developing new tailocins. This article reviews three strategies for producing tailocins: disrupting the capsid-tail junction of phage particles, blocking capsid assembly during phage propagation, and creating headless phage particles synthetically. Particularly appealing is the production of tailocins through synthetic biology using phages with contractile tails as scaffolds to unlock the antimicrobial potential of tailocins.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAntimicrobialMicrobiologyVirologyComputational biologyBacteriophages and microbial interactionsMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology