P21 A one-two punch? Investigating the potential of phage–antibiotic combination (PAC) therapy using pleurotin and phage K in Staphylococcus aureus
Michaël D Tadesse, Antonia Sagona, Fabrizio Alberti

TL;DR
This study explores combining phage therapy with the antibiotic pleurotin to treat Staphylococcus aureus, showing potential for enhanced effectiveness.
Contribution
The novel contribution is investigating phage K in combination with pleurotin, a natural compound, against S. aureus.
Findings
Phage K combined with pleurotin or vancomycin reduced S. aureus growth more effectively than either treatment alone.
Phage K lowered the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of pleurotin and vancomycin.
Pleurotin showed similar cytotoxicity to vancomycin and pleuromutilin in human cells.
Abstract
MDR organisms pose a major healthcare challenge. The current limitations on antibiotic discovery have necessitated the search for novel discovery methods and sources as well as non-antibiotic alternatives. The basidiomycete-derived, secondary metabolite pleurotin and its congeners could be a proponent of the former, as these have been shown to be effective against Gram-positive bacteria, while bacteriophages (phages) could be the ultimate non-antibiotic alternative. A very promising application of bacteriophage therapy is phage–antibiotic combination (PAC) therapy, where (cocktails of) phage and conventional antibiotic are employed against problematic bacterial strains. In this project, the combination of pleurotin and bacteriophages targeting Staphylococcus aureus was examined. Pleurotin was isolated from the basidiomycete Hohenbuehelia atrocaerulea grown in YM broth. Purification and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBacteriophages and microbial interactions · Microbial infections and disease research · Cancer Research and Treatments
