WO2005046579A2 - Defined dose therapeutic phage - Google Patents
Defined dose therapeutic phage Download PDFInfo
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- WO2005046579A2 WO2005046579A2 PCT/US2004/033224 US2004033224W WO2005046579A2 WO 2005046579 A2 WO2005046579 A2 WO 2005046579A2 US 2004033224 W US2004033224 W US 2004033224W WO 2005046579 A2 WO2005046579 A2 WO 2005046579A2
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- C12N—MICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
- C12N7/00—Viruses; Bacteriophages; Compositions thereof; Preparation or purification thereof
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K35/00—Medicinal preparations containing materials or reaction products thereof with undetermined constitution
- A61K35/66—Microorganisms or materials therefrom
- A61K35/76—Viruses; Subviral particles; Bacteriophages
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61P—SPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
- A61P29/00—Non-central analgesic, antipyretic or antiinflammatory agents, e.g. antirheumatic agents; Non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs [NSAID]
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61P—SPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
- A61P31/00—Antiinfectives, i.e. antibiotics, antiseptics, chemotherapeutics
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61P—SPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
- A61P31/00—Antiinfectives, i.e. antibiotics, antiseptics, chemotherapeutics
- A61P31/04—Antibacterial agents
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- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
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- C12N15/00—Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor
- C12N15/09—Recombinant DNA-technology
- C12N15/10—Processes for the isolation, preparation or purification of DNA or RNA
- C12N15/1034—Isolating an individual clone by screening libraries
- C12N15/1075—Isolating an individual clone by screening libraries by coupling phenotype to genotype, not provided for in other groups of this subclass
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- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
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- C12N2795/00—Bacteriophages
- C12N2795/00011—Details
- C12N2795/00032—Use of virus as therapeutic agent, other than vaccine, e.g. as cytolytic agent
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12N—MICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
- C12N2795/00—Bacteriophages
- C12N2795/00011—Details
- C12N2795/00061—Methods of inactivation or attenuation
Definitions
- the invention provides therapeutic, defined-dose anti-bacterial bacteriophage based preparations, methods to make such preparations, methods to treat bacterial infections using such preparations, methods to diagnose bacterial infections using such preparations, and various host production bacterial strains and related constructs.
- Bacteria are ubiquitous, and are found in virtually all habitable environments. They are common and diverse ecologically, and find unusual and common niches for survival. They are present all around the environment, and are present in soil, dust, water, and on virtually all surfaces. Many are normal and beneficial strains, which provide a synergistic relationship with hosts. Others are not so beneficial, or provide problems along with benefits.
- Pathogenic bacteria can cause infectious diseases in humans, in other animals, and also in plants. Some bacteria can only make one particular host ill; others cause trouble in a number of hosts, depending on the host specificity of the bacteria. The diseases caused by bacteria are almost as diverse as the bacteria themselves and include food poisoning, tooth ache, anthrax, and even certain forms of cancer. These diseases and the bacteria host relationships are typically the subject of the field of clinical microbiology.
- HMW bacteriocins are produced by a large number of bacterial species in their natural settings and are thought to play a role in giving the parent bacterium a selective advantage by killing other bacterial strains which may be competing for limited nutrition.
- These bacteriocins are thermolabile, trypsin resistant, sedimentable by centrifugation, and resolvable by electron microscope. See, e.g., Jabrane, et al. (2002) Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 68:5704-5710; Daw and Falkiner (1996) Micron 27:467-479; Bradley (1967) Bacteriol. Revs 31 :230-314; and Kageyama and Egami (1962) Life Sciences 9:471-476.
- a tailed bacteriophage generally comprises a head, called the capsid, and a tail.
- the capsid packages the nucleic acid that is necessary for the further propagation of the bacteriophage in the host bacterium. Therefore, phage tail and phage tail like structures can be similarly described as bacteriophage structures that are essentially devoid of phage DNA. See, e.g., Duckworth (1970) Virology 40:673-684; Chau-te Ou, et al. (1978) Anal. Biochem. 88:357-366. But other artificial assemblies of phage tail components may also retain the critical killing function, while lacking a replicating capacity in a selected target bacterium.
- Bacteria are killed in nature by bacteria-specific viruses, e.g., bacteriophage (or phage). Pyocins are believed to be tail-like portions of tailed phages. See, e.g., Abdelhamid, et al. (2002) Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 68:5704-5710; Strauch et al. (2001) Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 67:5635-5642; Nakayama, et al. (2000) Mol. Microbiol. 38:213-31; Daw and Falkiner (1996) Micron 27:467-479; Traub, et al. (1996) Primabl. Bakteriol.
- Certain bacteria are normally innocuous, but become pathogenic upon presentation of the appropriate opportunity, or become problematic upon introduction to an abnormal site or situation. Persons lacking effective immune systems are most vulnerable, and certain bacteria use susceptible weak hosts to provide a temporary environment to proliferate and disperse throughout the ecosystem and a host population.
- the present invention provides methods of using a host production bacterium to produce an anti-bacterial phage-based composition that inhibits growth of a target bacterium and is unable to replicate in the target bacterium.
- Many problems exist in using replication competent bacteriophage in a therapeutic treatment For example, the dose changes as the bacteriophage replicate, another is that the replication process inherently allows for the bacteriophage to mutate.
- Replication of the DNA or of the anti-bacterial bacteriophage can be prevented by a number of means.
- One means includes inactivating a nucleic acid of the anti-bacterial phage. Nucleic acid inactivation can be performed by many means, both physically and functionally, e.g., nicking the nucleic acid, fragmenting the nucleic acid, cross-linking said nucleic acid, or by chemically modifying said nucleic acid, or by incorporating missense, termination, frameshift, conditional, deletion, or insertion mutations into critical genes or regulatory elements.
- Replication of the anti-bacterial phage can be prevented by removing a nucleic acid from the anti-bacterial phage, in whole or in part.
- Nucleic acid can be removed by osmotic shock, by a freeze thaw cycle, by chemical methods, or by mechanical methods.
- the host production bacterium is a complementing host production bacterium that is able to complement the mutation of said anti-bacterial phage and allow replication and production of said anti-bacterial phage in the complementing host production bacterium.
- the mutation is a conditional (e.g., temperature sensitive) mutation and the host bacterium complements the mutation at the non-permissive condition (e.g., temperature).
- a helper phage or expression unit is used to complement the mutation.
- the phage has incorporated a function which prevents replication, e.g., a restriction site or enzyme which leads to degrading the phage DNA; the phage may incorporate a gene expressed early which prevents DNA or phage replication; or the phage may contain a deletion of a critical replication function.
- a function which prevents replication e.g., a restriction site or enzyme which leads to degrading the phage DNA
- the phage may incorporate a gene expressed early which prevents DNA or phage replication
- the phage may contain a deletion of a critical replication function.
- the present invention also provides complementing host bacterium and complementing helper phage for use in production of the anti-bacterial phage.
- the present invention provides pharmaceutical compositions comprising an antibacterial phage or portion thereof that inhibits growth of a target bacterium, and has diminished replication activity in the target bacterium.
- the anti-bacterial phage has no detectable replication activity in the target bacterium.
- the anti-bacterial phage kills the host bacterium.
- the anti-bacterial phage has less than 98% of the complexity of DNA of an intact parental phage; less than 20% or 2% of the a nucleic acid content of an intact parental phage; does not contain detectable nucleic acid; is an intact phage having nucleic acid with reduced (e.g., by 10% or more) replication capacity; comprises a tail portion of a tailed phage; comprises an electron microscope morphologically identifiable tail portion of a tailed phage; or consists essentially of a tail portion of a tailed phage.
- the pharmaceutical composition further includes a therapeutically compatible buffer of excipient, or includes a second therapeutic or antimicrobial agent.
- the second therapeutic agent may be, e.g., an inflammatory agent, or the second microbial agent can be, e.g., an antibiotic or a second anti-bacterial phage.
- Anti-bacterial phage can be made, e.g., (1) by amplifying a phage in a host bacterium, harvesting the phage from the bacterial culture, and removing substantially all of the nucleic acids from the phage; (2) by amplifying a phage in a host bacterium, harvesting the phage from the bacterial culture, and inactivating the nucleic acids of the phage; (3) by amplifying a phage in a host bacterium, harvesting the phage from the bacterial culture substantially before intact phage are produced; or (4) by amplifying a phage in a host bacterium, harvesting the phage from the bacterial culture, and harvesting the phage from the bacterial culture, wherein a nucleic acid of said anti-bacterial phage comprises a mutation and cannot assemble into a replication competent phage, and wherein the host
- the present invention provides a method of treating a bacterial population or infection in a subject by administering a therapeutically or prophylactically effective amount of a pharmaceutical compound including an anti-bacterial phage or anti-bacterial phage fragments.
- the bacterial infection is caused by the target bacterium, e.g., E. coli.
- the subject of treatment can be a human, a primate, a food, working, companion, or display animal.
- a second therapeutic agent may be administered, e.g., an anti-microbial agent, an antibiotic, or a second anti-bacterial phage.
- the pharmaceutical composition can be administered systemically, e.g., parenterally or orally, locally, e.g., topically or by inhalation, or otherwise, including by catheter or drain tube; and may result in a relative decrease in the target population of at least 10-1000 fold, or a decrease in detectability by at least 5-50 fold.
- the present invention provides a pharmaceutical composition including a genetically incompetent anti-bacterial phage, e.g., that inhibits growth of a target bacterium.
- the target bacterium is identified or diagnosed, including Escherichia, Staphylococcus, Pseudomonas, or Streptococcus; or the genetically incompetent anti-bacterial phage: lacks a full complement of genetic material, including deletions from a full complement; has a mutation and cannot or can only slowly assemble into a replication competent phage in the target bacterium, e.g., a defective critical structural component, inappropriate stoichiometry of components, or a defective critical assembly component; comprises nucleic acid with a reduced replication capacity, e.g., contains a mutation (missense, termination, frameshift, conditional, deletion, or insertion) in a critical phage replication function; or consists essentially of a tail protein from a tailed phage, including a myoviridae or syphoviridae phage.
- the present invention also provides methods for making such a composition or formulating a pharmaceutical composition, e.g.
- the present invention also provides a method of using a pharmaceutical composition including a genetically incompetent anti-bacterial phage or fragment to treat a bacterial population or infection, e.g., by administering an effective amount of the pharmaceutical composition including the genetically incompetent anti-bacterial phage.
- the method can be used to treat a human, a primate, a food , work, companion, or display animal.
- the pharmaceutical can be administered systemically, e.g., parenterally or orally, locally, e.g., topically or by inhalation; or by other methods.
- a second therapeutic or prophylactic agent e.g., antimicrobial agent, antibiotic, or a second anti-bacterial phage, can be administered with the anti-bacterial phage composition.
- the present invention further provides a method of identifying an anti-bacterial phage that is unable to replicate in a target bacterium by identifying a target bacterium, identifying a phage (e.g., natural isolates or selected mutationally diversified populations) that can inhibit growth of the target bacterium, and determining or generating a form of the phage (e.g., a fragment thereof) that is unable to replicate in the target bacterium.
- the present invention provides anti-bacterial-phages that have been identified using this method. Once identified, the phages may be further isolated, characterized, and modified.
- the present invention provides a method of producing an anti- bacterial phage by amplifying a phage, e.g., an intact parental phage, in a host bacterium, harvesting the phage from the bacterial culture, and removing substantially all of the nucleic acids from the phage.
- the phage may be a tailed phage; and the nucleic acids can be removed by a variety of methods including, e.g., osmotic shock, freeze thaw cycle, chemical methods, or mechanical methods; fragmenting the phage into binding specificity components (tails) separate from DNA containing packets (heads) and isolating the tails separately from the heads; separating a tail from a head of the tailed phage, and isolating the tail; harvesting the phage before a head and a tail have assembled to form an intact phage, and isolating the tails; and genetically mutating the phage so they cannot produce or package the nucleic acids, e.g., with a missense, termination, frameshift, conditional, deletion, or insertion mutation. Additional means to remove remaining intact phage, heads, or residual DNA may be included, e.g., sedimentation methods, affinity reagents, DNA degradation methods, etc.
- the invention provides methods of making a defined dose anti-bacterial phage that kills a target bacterium, by producing said phage in: a host production bacterium and isolating tail portions from DNA containing heads; a host production bacterium and inactivating nucleic acid of said phage, e.g., by nicking, fragmenting, crosslinking, chemically modifying, or removing; a host production bacterium and harvesting temporally before phage assembly; a complementing host; capable of complementing a blockage of replication in the target, including with use of a helper phage; or a permissive host which phage are non-permissive in a different condition, e.g., temperature.
- the method can be performed using a tailed phage, including a myoviridae or syphoviridae, and, e.g., separating the anti-bacterial phage tails from DNA containing heads.
- the anti-bacterial phage can: include a replication blocking mutation, e.g., a point mutation; missense, termination, frameshift, conditional, deletion, or insertion; be produced in a complementing host production bacterium , with or without a helper phage or the like; exhibit les than 99% of the complexity of a replication capable parental phage; exhibit less than 20%, or 5%, of the DNA or phage replication activity in the target bacterium compared to the host production bacterium; exhibit diminished immunogenicity compared to intact parental phage upon presentation to a mammal, e.g., by at least about 30%, 60%, 90%, 95%, 99%, in total immune response or number of epitopes responded to; exhibit little or no significant DNA replication or phage replication capacity in the target bacterium; kill a pathogenic, nosocomial, pyogenic, Gram negative, Gram positive, Escherichia, Staphylococcus, Pseudomonas, or Strepto
- the antibacterial phage can include any of the following replication blocking mutations: a point mutation; a deletion mutation; or an insertion mutation in a gene necessary for replication in said target bacterium.
- the complementing host can be selected to provide the function of the mutated gene product and the present invention also provides the complementing host bacterium.
- the invention also provides methods to produce defined dose anti-bacterial phage that exhibit diminished capacity to transmit toxin genes in the target bacteria when compared to intact phage in the host bacterium, as well as defined dose anti-bacterial phage that have diminished immunogenicity, e.g., encoding fewer epitopes, upon administration to a mammal as compared to intact phage from a host production bacteria.
- the present invention provides defined dose anti-bacterial phage that exhibit lesser, or no detectable replication activity in the target bacterium.
- the defined dose anti-bacterial phage can be used to treat target bacteria, e.g., a pathogenic bacterium, such as a nosocomial or pyogenic bacterium.
- the pathogenic bacterium is a Gram negative bacterium, e.g., an E. coli bacterium.
- the present invention also provides a defined dose anti-bacterial composition comprising a phage protein derived from an intact parental phage or prophage, where the anti-bacterial composition is capable of killing a target bacterium, and the composition exhibits less than about 20% or 5% replication activity in the target bacterium as compared to the intact parental phage.
- the anti-bacterial phage exhibits: diminished capacity to transmit toxin genes in the target bacteria when compared to intact phage in the host bacterium; diminished immunogenicity as compared to intact phage from a host production bacteria upon administration to a mammal; or no substantial, e.g., less than about 20%o, replication activity in the target bacterium.
- the defined dose anti-bacterial composition can be used to kill a target bacterium that is pathogenic, nosocomial, pyogenic, Gram negative, environmental, or food bacteria, including an Escherichia, Staphylococcus, Pseudomonas, or Streptococcus bacterium.
- the defined dose anti-bacterial composition comprising a phage protein can also include a nucleic acid with reduced nucleic acid content or replication capacity, e.g., nicked, fragmented, cross linked, or UV irradiated.
- the defined dose anti-bacterial composition comprising a phage protein can also possess less than 20% of the nucleic acid content of the intact parental phage; can lack any detectable nucleic acid; or can include damaged DNA that is unable to be replicated.
- the defined dose anti-bacterial composition comprising a phage protein can be a tail portion derived from an intact parental phage that is a tailed phage.
- the defined dose anti-bacterial composition comprising a phage protein can include a second agent, including, e.g., another therapeutic or prophylactic compound, e.g., an inflammatory agent, anti-microbial, antibiotic, bacterial cell wall growth disrupting compound, or a second anti-bacterial phage.
- a second agent including, e.g., another therapeutic or prophylactic compound, e.g., an inflammatory agent, anti-microbial, antibiotic, bacterial cell wall growth disrupting compound, or a second anti-bacterial phage.
- the defined dose anti-bacterial composition can also include a therapeutically compatible buffer or excipient.
- the defined dose anti-bacterial composition comprising a phage protein can be made: by a processing intact parental phage to remove or inactivate nucleic acids; or by harvesting phage from a host bacterium before intact phage are assembled; or in a complementing host strain, where the parental strain is defective in expressing critical genes for assembly, production, release, or infection by said phage.
- the defect can be a result of a point mutation, including a missense, termination, frameshift, conditional, deletion, or insertion, that prevents phage replication or production.
- the defined dose anti-bacterial composition comprising a phage protein can be administered to a eukaryote suffering from a bacterial infection or colonization by the target bacterium.
- the eukaryote can be a mammal, including a primate, and may be a food, work, display, or companion animal.
- the target bacterium can be a pathogenic, nosocomial, or pyogenic bacterium. In one embodiment, the target bacterium is E. coli. In one embodiment, the infection has been diagnosed to be susceptible to the composition. [0039]
- the defined dose anti-bacterial composition comprising a phage protein can be administered systemically, locally, parentally, orally, topically, by inhalation, catheter, or drip tube; or with an antibiotic, anti-microbial, or other therapeutic or prophylactic agent. In one embodiment, the infection has already been treated with an antibiotic.
- the eukaryote can also be inoculated with another bacterium to replace the target bacterium.
- the present invention provides a therapeutic anti-bacterial composition, including a genetically incompetent phage that kills a target bacterium.
- the genetically incompetent phage can, e.g., lack detectable nucleic acid; lack a set of genes necessary to replicate or assemble in the target bacterium; include damaged nucleic acid, e.g., physically or chemically, that cannot be replicated; include a suicide gene, such as a restriction enzyme or a phage exclusion system; include a missense, termination, frameshift, conditional, deletion, or insertion mutation in a critical phage replication gene; or include a tail protein from a tailed phage, e.g., essentially the tail portion of a phage.
- the composition can be used therapeutically or prophylactically to treat a food, work, display, or companion animal, or primate.
- the target bacterium can be a pathogenic bacterium.
- the composition can be administered topically or systemically.
- the composition can by administered in combination with a second compound, such as an anti-bacterial agent, antibiotic, DNA replication inhibitors, protein, lipid, or cell wall growth inhibitors, inflammatory agent, or excipient.
- the present invention provides anti-bacterial phages or parts thereof that are unable to replicate in a target bacteria and that also inhibit growth of the target bacteria.
- the antibacterial phages are thus useful for inhibiting bacterial growth or presence in the environment and for treating bacterial infection in a subject in need of such treatment. Because the anti- bacterial phage compositions are unable to replicate in a target bacteria, they can be administered as a defined dose therapeutic composition for treatment of bacterial infections. This provides substantial regulatory advantages, which prevent changing stoichiometric ratios of treatment and target entities as the bacterial infection and bacteriophage replication processes progress.
- This invention provides the first disclosure that, for each pathogenic bacteria target, a tailed portion of a phage from the Siphoviridae or Myoviridae families will be useful as a defined dose therapeutic agent to inhibit growth of or kill the pathogenic bacteria.
- the relationship of natural pyocins to phage tail portions has not been established.
- the proposition that tails can be isolated from most any bacteriophage exhibiting a desired host range and thereafter converted into defined dose compositions greatly enlarges the universe of potential sources and the means to isolate desired tail fragments.
- bacteria is generally shortened to "phage".
- Bacteriophage typically refers to a functional phage, but in many contexts herein may refer to a part thereof, generally exhibiting a particular function.
- the phage may be lytic or lysogenic. See, e.g., Chen and Lu (2002) Applied andEnv. Microbiol. 68:2589-2594.
- the term may also refer to portions thereof, including, e.g., a tail portion, a head portion, or an assembly of components which provide substantially the same functional activity.
- the portion may be a physical fragment of an intact phage, a selected product from normal or abnonnal assembly of phage parts, or even an artificial construct, e.g., from genetic manipulation of genes encoding (1) phage parts, (2) critical phage assembly components, or even (3) associated host genes which may be useful in ensuring phage replication or production.
- an artificial construct e.g., from genetic manipulation of genes encoding (1) phage parts, (2) critical phage assembly components, or even (3) associated host genes which may be useful in ensuring phage replication or production.
- a phage genome typically the term refers to a naturally occurring phage genome, but may include fragments, artificial constructs, mutagenized genomes, selected genomes, and particularly "prophage" sequences, which are considered to be "defective" genomes which may have had segments deleted, inserted, or otherwise affected to disrupt normal genome function.
- phage will be morphologically identifiable, having a size which is resolvable by imaging methods, e.g., electron microscopy.
- imaging methods e.g., electron microscopy. See, e.g., Ackermann and Nguyen (1983) Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 45:1049-1059; Tsaneva (1976) Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 31:590-601; Talledo, et al. (2003) Environ. Microbiol. 5:350-354; and Duda and Eiserling (1982) J. Virol. 43:714-720.
- an "anti-bacterial phage” is a phage or phage-based construct (e.g., a phage tail, tail fragment, phage protein, or ghost phage) that is unable to replicate, DNA or the phage itself, or assemble in a target bacterium, but that inhibits the growth, survival, or replication of the target bacterium.
- an "anti-bacterial phage” can include a portion of a phage that can be used to inhibit growth of the target bacterium and lacks capacity to replicate itself in the target.
- an antibacterial phage can be a portion of an intact phage that can be produced in a non-target bacteria.
- an anti-bacterial phage can include a structural portion of an intact phage, e.g., a tail portion of a tailed phage; or an isolated protein component of an intact phage.
- These phage-based compositions include one or more proteins or protein domains derived from a natural or engineered bacteriophage.
- anti-bacterial phage include constructs which contain less than about 70%, 50%, 20%, 5%, 2%, 1%, 0.1%, or less of the parental phage nucleic acid content.
- the content may be either mass, or informational content, e.g., where some portion of the informational content is deleted.
- phage are viruses that infect bacteria.
- Antibacterial phages include a phage from the families Podoviridae, Siphoviridae, Myoviridae, Lipothrixviridae, Plasmaviridae, Corticoviridae, Fuselloviridae, Tectiviridae, Cystoviridae, Levividae, Microviridae, Inoviridae plectrovirus, and Inoviridae inovirus. See Ackermann and Dubow (1987) Viruses of Prokaryotes CRC Press, ISBN: 0849360544).
- the antibacterial phage is derived from a tailed phage from the families
- the anti-bacterial phage is derived, e.g., by mutagenesis or engineered, from a naturally occurring or wild-type tailed phage from the family myoviridae or from the family Siphoviridae.
- target bacterium or “target bacteria” refer to a bacterium or bacteria whose growth, survival, or replication is inhibited by an antibacterial phage.
- “Growth inhibition” can refer, e.g., to slowing of the rate of bacterial cell division, or cessation of bacterial cell division, or to death of the bacteria.
- the "target bacterium” or “target bacteria” are pathogenic bacteria.
- host bacterium or “host bacteria” refer to a bacterium or bacteria used to produce, replicate, or amplify a phage, sometimes referred to as a parental phage, that is used to produce an anti-bacterial phage.
- Host bacteria or bacterium are also referred to as "host production bacterium” or "host production bacteria,” throughout.
- the parental phage is a prophage, e.g., a defective or incomplete phage genome.
- the host production culture complements a defect in the phage, or suppresses a destructive function encoded in the phage.
- the host production culture may make use of a helper phage to effect the capability.
- An anti-bacterial phage is a phage that, in addition to its growth inhibitory activity, is essentially unable to replicate in the target bacterium under the conditions of use.
- replication refers to phage nucleic acid replication, or to production of a phage.
- replication or “replication activity” in the context of nucleic acids refers to replication of genetic material, e.g., DNA or RNA. Replication can also refer to replication of a functional phage, which may involve assembly of an intact phage, and includes synthesis of components of the phage, including proteins; and assembly of the components of the phage to form an intact phage.
- a replication deficient phage is a phage that is deficient in one or more of the processes noted above.
- Standard methods are conveniently used to evaluate the replication capacity of a construct. For example, the ability to fonn plaques on a host bacterial lawn can be used.
- inactivation will decrease function, e.g., the replication capacity by at least 3 fold, and may affect it by 10, 30, 100, 300, etc., to many orders of magnitude.
- Loss of replication activity by an anti-bacterial phage can occur, e.g., through removal of all or critical portions of nucleic acids, inactivation of nucleic acids, removal of structural portions of a phage, e.g., removal of the head of a tailed phage.
- the replication activity of an anti-bacterial phage in a target bacterium is preferably measured relative to the replication activity of the parental phage in the host bacterium, or relative the parental phage in the target bacterium.
- an anti- bacterial phage can exhibit less than 10%, 1%, 0.1%, 0.01%, 0.001% or 0.0001% of the levels of nucleic acid, e.g., DNA or RNA, or polymerase activity of a parental phage. Diminished polymerase activity can occur because of changes in the enzyme or changes in the substrate nucleic acids, e.g., removal or inactivation of the nucleic acid of an anti- bacterial phage.
- the anti-bacterial phage can have less than 10%, 1%, 0.1%, 0.01%, 0.001% or 0.0001% of the levels of a component of the parental phage, e.g., DNA or RNA, phage heads, or specific phage proteins. Inactive phage may result from aberrant stoichiometric ratios of structural or functional components.
- Anti-bacterial phage can also include phage whose nucleic acids have been inactivated or functionally modified. Those of skill will recognize that many methods can be used to inactivate nucleic acids, e.g., UN and X ray irradiation, fragmentation of D ⁇ A, and/or treatment with chemicals including D-glucosamine and ferrous ammonium sulfate.
- Anti-bacterial phage also include phage constructs whose nucleic acid has been partially or totally removed. Some such phage are also referred to as "ghosts" or "ghost phage.” Methods to remove nucleic acids from phage and make anti-bacterial phage include removal of all or substantially all of the structural components that contain phage nucleic acids, e.g., retaining the tails of a tailed phage. Nucleic acid can also be removed by compromising the structural integrity of a phage, e.g.
- Anti-bacterial phage also include phage that comprise a mutation and cannot efficiently assemble into a replication competent phage in the target bacteria.
- Mutations can include mutations in genes that encode enzymes for replication of nucleic acids or genes that encode regulators of replication; or in genes that encode structural components of a phage or genes that encode regulators of the synthesis of structural components, or genes that encode proteins critical for assembly, e.g., assembly functions, or genes that regulate stoichiometry of proteins necessary for proper assembly.
- the mutations can be in the coding region of a gene or in a regulatory region of the gene, e.g., a promoter.
- a complementing host production bacterium comprises a complementing nucleic acid or activity, e.g., in a plasmid or supplied by a helper phage, that complements the mutation comprised by the anti-bacterial phage.
- the bacterium comprises a nucleic acid that encodes a protein that supplies the function of the mutated protein in the anti-bacterial phage.
- the complementing nucleic acid can be part of the bacterial genome or part of an extra-genomic element, e.g., a plasmid.
- a second phage in the bacterium comprises the complementing nucleic acid, e.g., a helper phage.
- phage mutations and complementing host or phage include a) phage comprising termination mutations and complementing host or phage comprising tRNA suppressors, b) phage comprising mutations in genes critical for replication, production, or assembly, and complementing host or phage comprising antisense constructs that complement the mutation, c) phage comprising insertion mutations and complementing host or phage that comprise suppressors of the mutations, d) phage comprising deletion mutations and complementing host or phage that comprise suppressors of the mutations, and e) phage which encode an additional deleterious function, e.g., a restriction or phage exclusion system, and complementing host or phage that comprise an inactivating function, e.g., a modification system.
- an "anti-microbial agent” is an agent or compound that can be used to inhibit the growth of or to kill bacteria.
- Anti-microbial agents include antibiotics, chemotherapeutic agents, antibodies (with or without complement), chemical inhibitors of DNA, RNA, protein, lipid, or cell wall synthesis or functions, and anti-bacterial phages, usually referring to the second or more phages when more than one anti-bacterial phage is present in a compound or used in a method of the present invention.
- amplifying a phage in a host bacterium refers to infecting a host bacterium with a parental phage under conditions that allow the DNA or phage to replicate and make copies of itself.
- harvesting a phage from a bacterial culture refers to removing the phage from the host bacterial culture.
- the phage can have the attributes of an anti-bacterial phage, e.g., ability to inhibit growth of the target bacterium and inability to replicate in the target bacterium.
- the phage can be treated, before or after removal from the bacterial culture, to produce an antibacterial phage, e.g., through removal or inactivation of nucleic acids.
- the anti-bacterial phage can be further purified to remove residual replication competent phage before application to the target bacteria, e.g., administration to a subject infected with the target bacteria.
- a "bacterial infection” refers to growth of bacteria, e.g., in a subject or environment, such that the bacteria actually or potentially could cause disease or a symptom in the subject or environment. This may include prophylactic treatment of substances or materials, including organ donations, medical equipment such as a respirator or dialysis machine, or wounds, e.g., during or after surgery, e.g., to remove target bacteria which may cause problems upon further growth
- a "subject in need of treatment” is a animal or plant with a bacterial infection that is potentially life-threatening or that impairs health or shortens the lifespan of the animal.
- the animal can be a fish, bird, or mammal.
- Exemplary mammals include humans, domesticated animals (e.g., cows, horses, sheep, pigs, dogs, and cats), and exhibition animals, e.g., in a zoo.
- anti-bacterial phage are used to treat plants with bacterial infections, or to treat environmental occurrences of the target bacteria, such as in a hospital or commercial setting.
- a "pharmaceutically acceptable” component is one that is suitable for use with humans, animals, and/or plants without undue adverse side effects (such as toxicity, irritation, and allergic response) commensurate with a reasonable benefit/risk ratio.
- a "safe and effective amount” refers to a quantity of a component that is sufficient to yield a desired therapeutic response without undue adverse side effects (such as toxicity, irritation, or allergic response) commensurate with a reasonable benefit/risk ratio when used in the manner of this invention.
- therapeutically effective amount is meant an amount of a component effective to yield a desired therapeutic response, e.g., an amount effective to slow the rate of bacterial cell division, or to cause cessation of bacterial cell division, or to cause death or decrease rate of population growth of the bacteria.
- the specific safe and effective amount or therapeutically effective amount will vary with such factors as the particular condition being treated, the physical condition, of the subject, the type of subject being treated, the duration of the treatment, the nature of concurrent therapy (if any), and the specific fonnulations employed and the structure of the compounds or its derivatives.
- Nucleic acid refers to deoxyribonucleotides or ribonucleotides and polymers (pure or mixed) thereof in single- or double-stranded form.
- the term encompasses nucleic acids containing nucleotide analogs or modified backbone residues or linkages, which are synthetic, naturally occurring, and non-naturally occurring, which have similar binding, structural, or functional properties as the reference nucleic acid, and which are metabolized in a manner similar to the reference nucleotides.
- Examples of such analogs include, without limitation, phosphorothioates, phosphoramidates, methyl phosphonates, chiral-methyl phosphonates, 2-O-methyl ribonucleotides, and peptide-nucleic acids (PNAs).
- nucleic acid sequence also implicitly encompasses conservatively modified variants thereof (e.g., degenerate codon substitutions) and complementary sequences, as well as the sequence explicitly indicated.
- degenerate codon substitutions may be achieved by generating sequences in which the third position of one or more selected (or all) codons is substituted with mixed-base and/or deoxyinosine residues. See, e.g., Batzer, et al. (1991) Nucleic Acid Res. 19:5081-xxxx; Ohtsuka, et al. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260:2605-2608; Rossolini, et al. (1994) Mol. Cell. Probes 8:91-98.
- nucleic acid is typically used interchangeably with gene, cDNA, mRNA, oligonucleotide, and polynucleotide.
- a particular nucleic acid sequence also implicitly encompasses "splice variants.”
- a particular protein encoded by a nucleic acid implicitly encompasses a protein encoded by a splice variant of that nucleic acid.
- “Splice variants,” as the name suggests, are products of alternative splicing of a gene segment. After transcription, an initial nucleic acid transcript may be spliced such that different (alternate) nucleic acid splice products encode different polypeptides.
- Mechanisms for the production of splice variants vary, but include alternate splicing of exons. Alternate polypeptides derived from the same nucleic acid by read-through transcription are also encompassed by this definition. Products of a splicing reaction, including recombinant forms of the splice products, are included in this definition.
- polypeptide typically used l interchangeably herein to refer to a polymer of amino acid residues.
- the terms apply to amino acid polymers in which one or more amino acid residue is an artificial chemical mimetic of a corresponding naturally occurring amino acid, as well as to naturally occurring amino acid polymers and non-naturally occurring amino acid polymers.
- amino acid refers to naturally occurring and synthetic amino acids, as well as amino acid analogs and amino acid mimetics that function in a manner similar to the naturally occurring amino acids.
- Naturally occurring amino acids are those encoded by the genetic code, as well as those amino acids that are later modified, e.g., hydroxyproline, ⁇ - carboxyglutamate, and O-phosphoserine.
- Amino acid analogs refer to compounds that have a similar basic chemical structure or function as a naturally occurring amino acid, e.g., an ⁇ carbon that is bound to a hydrogen, a carboxyl group, an amino group, and an R group, e.g., homoserine, norleucine, methionine sulfoxide, and methionine methyl sulfonium. Such analogs have modified R groups (e.g., norleucine) or modified peptide backbones, but retain a similar basic chemical structure as a naturally occurring amino acid.
- Amino acid mimetic refers to a chemical compound that has a structure that is different from the general chemical structure of an amino acid, but that functions in a manner similar to a naturally occurring amino acid.
- Amino acids may be referred to herein by either their commonly known three letter symbols or by the one-letter symbols recommended by the TUPAC-IUB Biochemical Nomenclature Commission. Nucleotides, likewise, may be referred to by their commonly accepted single-letter codes.
- Constantly modified variants applies to both amino acid and nucleic acid sequences. With respect to particular nucleic acid sequences, conservatively modified variants refers to those nucleic acids which encode identical or essentially identical amino acid sequences, or where the nucleic acid does not encode an amino acid sequence, to sequences exhibiting essentially identical function. Because of the degeneracy of the genetic code, a large number of functionally identical nucleic acids can encode a given protein. For instance, the codons GCA, GCC, GCG, and GCU all encode the amino acid alanine. Thus, at every position where an alanine is specified by a codon, the codon can be altered to the corresponding codons described without altering the encoded polypeptide.
- nucleic acid variations are typically "silent variations,” which are one species of conservatively modified variations. Every nucleic acid sequence herein which encodes a polypeptide also describes every silent variation of the nucleic acid.
- each codon in a nucleic acid except AUG, which is ordinarily the only codon for methionine, and TGG, which is ordinarily the only codon for tryptophan
- TGG which is ordinarily the only codon for tryptophan
- amino acid sequences one of skill will recognize that individual substitutions, deletions or additions to a nucleic acid, peptide, polypeptide, or protein sequence which alters, adds or deletes a single amino acid or a small percentage of amino acids in the encoded sequence is a "conservatively modified variant" where the alteration results in the substitution of an amino acid with a chemically similar amino acid. Conservative substitution tables providing functionally similar amino acids are well known in the art. Such conservatively modified variants are in addition to and do not exclude polymorphic variants, interspecies homologs, and alleles of the invention.
- the following eight groups each contain amino acids that are typically considered conservative substitutions for one another: 1) Alanine (A), Glycine (G); 2) Aspartic acid (D), Glutamic acid (E); 3) Asparagine (N), Glutamine (Q); 4) Arginine (R), Lysine (K); 5) Isoleucine (I), Leucine (L), Methionine (M), Naline (N); 6) Phenylalanine (F), Tyrosine (Y), Tryptophan (W); 7) Serine (S), Threonine (T); and 8) Cysteine (C), Methionine (M) (see, e.g., Creighton (1984) Proteins).
- Macromolecular structures such as polypeptide structures can be described in terms of various levels of organization. For a general discussion of this organization, see, e.g., Alberts, et al. (1994) Molecular Biology of the Cell (3d ed.) and Cantor and Schimmel (1980) Biophysical Chemistry Part I: The Conformation of Biological Macromolecules.
- Primary structure refers to the amino acid sequence of a particular peptide.
- Secondary structure refers to locally ordered, three dimensional structures within a polypeptide. These structures are commonly known as domains, e.g., transmembrane domains, pore domains, and cytoplasmic tail domains.
- Domains are generally portions of a polypeptide that form a compact unit of the polypeptide and are typically 15 to 350 amino acids long. Exemplary domains include domains with enzymatic activity, e.g., phosphatase domains, ligand binding domains, etc. Typical domains are made up of sections of lesser organization such as stretches of ⁇ -sheet and ⁇ -helices.
- “Tertiary structure” refers to the complete three dimensional structure of a polypeptide monomer.
- Quaternary structure refers to the three dimensional structure formed typically by noncovalent association of independent tertiary units. Anisotropic terms are also known as energy terms.
- a “label” or a “detectable moiety” is a composition detectable by spectroscopic, photochemical, biochemical, immunochemical, chemical, or other physical means.
- useful labels include 32P, fluorescent dyes, electron dense reagents, enzymes (e.g., as commonly used in an ELISA), biotin, digoxigenin, or haptens and proteins which can be made detectable, e.g., by incorporating a radiolabel into the peptide or used to detect antibodies specifically reactive with the peptide.
- recombinant when used with reference, e.g., to a cell, or nucleic acid, protein, or vector, indicates that the cell, nucleic acid, protein or vector, has been modified by the introduction of a heterologous nucleic acid or protein or the alteration of a native nucleic acid or protein, or that the cell is derived from a cell so modified.
- recombinant cells express genes that are not found within the native (non-recombinant) form of the cell or express native genes that are otherwise abnormally expressed, under expressed, or not expressed at all.
- heterologous when used with reference to portions of a nucleic acid indicates that the nucleic acid comprises two or more subsequences that are not nonnally found in the same relationship to each other in nature.
- the nucleic acid is typically recombinantly produced, having two or more sequences from unrelated genes arranged to make a new functional nucleic acid, e.g., a promoter from one source and a coding region from another source.
- a heterologous protein indicates that the protein comprises two or more subsequences that are not found in the same relationship to each other in nature (e.g., a fusion protein).
- Antibody refers to a polypeptide comprising a framework region from an immunoglobulin gene or fragments thereof that specifically binds and recognizes an antigen.
- the recognized immunoglobulin genes include the kappa, lambda, alpha, gamma, delta, epsilon, and mu constant region genes, as well as the myriad immunoglobulin variable region genes.
- Light chains are classified as either kappa or lambda.
- Heavy chains are classified as gamma, mu, alpha, delta, or epsilon, which in turn define the immunoglobulin classes, IgG, IgM, IgA, IgD and IgE, respectively.
- the antigen-binding region of an antibody will be most critical in specificity and affinity of binding. See, e.g., Paul (2003) Fundamental Immunology (5th ed.) Lippincott.
- An exemplary immunoglobulin (antibody) structural unit comprises a tetramer.
- Each tetramer is composed of two identical pairs of polypeptide chains, each pair having one "light” (about 25 kD) and one "heavy” chain (about 50-70 kD).
- the N-terminus of each chain defines a variable region of about 100 to 110 or more amino acids primarily responsible for antigen recognition.
- the terms variable light chain (NL) and variable heavy chain (NH) refer to these light and heavy chains, respectively.
- Antibodies exist, e.g., as intact immunoglobulins or as a number of well- characterized fragments produced by digestion with various peptidases.
- pepsin digests an antibody below the disulfi.de linkages in the hinge region to produce F(ab)' , a dimer of Fab which itself is a light chain joined to V H -C H 1 by a disulfide bond.
- the F(ab)' 2 may be reduced under mild conditions to break the disulfide linkage in the hinge region, thereby converting the F(ab)' 2 dimer into an Fab' monomer.
- the Fab' monomer is essentially Fab with part of the hinge region (see Paul (1993) Fundamental Immunology (3d ed.). While various antibody fragments are defined in terms of the digestion of an intact antibody, one of skill will appreciate that such fragments may be synthesized de novo either chemically or by using recombinant D ⁇ A methodology. Thus, the term antibody, as used herein, also includes antibody fragments either produced by the modification of whole antibodies, or those synthesized de novo using recombinant D ⁇ A methodologies (e.g., single chain Fv) or those identified using phage display libraries (see, e.g., McCafferty, et al. (1990) Nature 348:552-554).
- antibodies e.g., recombinant, monoclonal, or polyclonal antibodies
- many techniques known in the art can be used (see, e.g., Kohler & Milstein (1975) ⁇ atwre 256:495-497; Kozbor, et al. (1983) Immunology Today 4:72-xx; Cole, et al. (1985) pp. 77-96 in Monoclonal Antibodies and Cancer Therapy, Alan R. Liss, Inc.; Coligan (1991) Current Protocols in Immunology; Harlow and Lane (1988) Antibodies, A Laboratory Manual; and Goding (1986) Monoclonal Antibodies: Principles and Practice (2d ed.)).
- Genes encoding heavy and light chains of an antibody of interest can be cloned from a cell, e.g., the genes encoding a monoclonal antibody can be cloned from a hybridoma and used to produce a recombinant monoclonal antibody.
- Gene libraries encoding heavy and light chains of monoclonal antibodies can also be made from hybridoma or plasma cells. Random combinations of the heavy and light chain gene products generate a large pool of antibodies with different antigenic specificity (see, e.g., Kuby (1997) Immunology (3d ed.)). Techniques for the production of single chain antibodies or recombinant antibodies (U.S. Patent 4,946,778, U.S. Patent No.
- mice can be used to express humanized or human antibodies (see, e.g., U.S. Patent Nos. 5,545,807; 5,545,806; 5,569,825; 5,625,126; 5,633,425; 5,661,016, Marks, et al. (1992) Bio/Technology 10:779-783; Lonberg, et al. (1994) Nature 368:856-859; Morrison (1994) Nature 368:812-13; Fishwild, et al.
- phage display technology can be used to identify antibodies and heteromeric Fab fragments that specifically bind to selected antigens (see, e.g., McCafferty, et al. (1990) Nature 348:552-554; Marks, et al. (1992) Biotechnology 10:779-783).
- Antibodies can also be made bispecific, e.g., able to recognize two different antigens (see, e.g., WO 93/08829, Traunecker, et al.
- Antibodies can also be heteroconjugates, e.g., two covalently joined antibodies, or immunotoxins (see, e.g., U.S. Patent No. 4,676,980 , WO91/00360; WO92/200373; and EP03089)
- a "chimeric antibody” is an antibody molecule in which (a) the constant region, or a portion thereof, is altered, replaced or exchanged so that the antigen binding site (variable region) is linked to a constant region of a different or altered class, effector function and/or species, or an entirely different molecule which confers new properties to the chimeric antibody, e.g., an enzyme, toxin, hormone, growth factor, drug, etc.; or (b) the variable region, or a portion thereof, is altered, replaced or exchanged with a variable region having a different or altered antigen specificity.
- the antibody or phage tail is conjugated to an "effector" moiety.
- the effector moiety can be any from a number of molecules, including labeling moieties such as radioactive labels or fluorescent labels, or can be a therapeutic moiety. Some therapeutic moieties may provide high enzymatic turnover, providing large activities per moiety, and my be important in attracting or inducing natural physiological reactions which may assist in the desired therapeutic result, e.g., attracting macrophages or other components of the immune system..
- the antibody modulates the activity of the protein.
- the specified antibodies bind to a particular protein at least two times the background and more typically more than 10 to 100 times background.
- Specific binding to an antibody under such conditions requires an antibody that is selected for its specificity for a particular protein. This selection may be achieved by subtracting out (depleting, e.g., by absorption) antibodies that cross-react with other molecules.
- immunoassay formats may be used to select antibodies specifically immunoreactive with a particular protein.
- solid-phase ELISA immunoassays are routinely used to select antibodies specifically immunoreactive with a protein (see, e.g., Harlow and Lane (1988) Antibodies, A Laboratory Manual for a description of immunoassay formats and conditions that can be used to determine specific immunoreactivity).
- the anti-bacterial phage are used to inhibit growth, survival, or replication of a desired, e.g., pathogenic, bacteria.
- the bacteria may be an environmentally deleterious strain, or may be treated in a prophylactic manner.
- the internal tissues e.g. blood, brain, muscle, etc.
- the surface tissues e.g., skin and mucous membranes
- the normal flora is the mixture of organisms regularly found at an anatomical site, e.g., skin, conjunctiva, nose, pharynx, mouth, lower intestine, anterior urethra, and vagina.
- the normal flora of humans e.g., is exceedingly complex and consists of more than 200 species of bacteria.
- Clinical microbiology studies these and pathogenic strains, and other aspects of the related biology relevant to human health. See, e.g., Sarma (2001) Medical Microbiology: A Clinical Perspective Paras, Heyderabad, ISBN: 8188129070; Baron, et al. (1994) Bailey & Scott's Diagnostic Microbiology (9th ed.), ISBN: 0801669871; Balows, et al. (eds. 1991) Manual of Clinical Microbiology (5th ed.) Am. Soc. Microbiol., Wash.
- the makeup of the normal flora depends upon various factors, including genetics, age, sex, stress, nutrition, and diet of the individual.
- the normal flora of humans includes eukaryotic fungi and protists, and some methanogenic Archaea that colonize the lower intestinal tract, but bacteria are the most numerous and obvious microbial components of the normal flora.
- the normal flora are typically adapted to their host (tissues), most probably by biochemical interactions between bacterial surface components (ligands or adhesins) and host cell molecular receptors. Much information is available on the nature of adhesion of bacterial pathogens to animal cells and tissues, and reasonably similar mechanisms should apply to the normal flora.
- a pathogenic microorganism generally causes disease, sometimes only in particular circumstances. Pathogenicity is the ability to produce disease or deleterious symptoms in a host organism. Microbes express their pathogenicity by means of their virulence, a term which refers to the degree of pathogenicity of the microbe. Hence, determinants of virulence of a pathogen are its genetic or biochemical or structural features that enable it to produce disease or symptoms in a host.
- nosocomial bacteria including bacteria that populate a typical hospital environment, or bacteria that are present on human skin, or bacteria that infect and form pus in wounds.
- Nosocomial infections are infections which become evident during a hospital stay or are related to a procedure performed in a hospital. These procedure-related infections often become evident after patients are discharged from the hospital.
- the most common nosocomial infections are urinary tract infections, surgical-site infections, pneumonia, and serious systemic infections, in which bacteria or fungi can be grown from blood.
- Acquiring a microbe in a hospital does not cause a nosocomial infection itself. It is often stated that a patient 'contracted' a hospital bug and the surgical wound was infected. However, the issue is more complex.
- nosocomial infection is a chain of events, which is influenced by the microbe, transmission route, and patient him/herself, i.e., his/her underlying illness, resistance to infections, and treatment of the underlying illness.
- Most nosocomial infections are caused by microbes which are otherwise present in the microbial flora on the skin or mucous membranes of the patient.
- microbes originate from outside the body: another patient, staff, or hospital environment.
- the microbial flora of the patient often change during the hospital stay, mostly due to anti-microbial treatment of particular components of the flora thereby often modifying the relationships of the various components.
- Modem treatments often necessitate the use of intravenous catheters, urinary catheters, respirators, hemodialysis, complicated operations, cortisone therapy and other factors, which depress resistance mechanisms and make patients susceptible to infections.
- Gram positive bacteria include, e.g., Staphylococcus (pyogenic), Enterococcus (opportunistic), Streptococcus, Enterococcus, Bacillus, Micrococcus, Mycobacterium, Corynebacterium, and Clostridium.
- Gram negative bacteria include e.g., Pseudomonas (pyogenic), E.
- the pyogenic cocci are spherical bacteria that cause various suppurative (pus- producing) infections in animals. Included are the Gram-positive cocci Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pyogenes, and Streptococcus pneumoniae, and the Gram-negative cocci, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and N.
- meningitidis In terms of their phylogeny, physiology, and genetics, these genera of bacteria range from very near to very far in similarity. See, e.g., Garrity, et al. (eds. 2001) Bergy 's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology Springer, NY.
- the Gram-positive cocci are the leading pathogens of humans. It is estimated that they produce at least a third of all the bacterial infections of humans, including strep throat, pneumonia, food poisoning, various skin diseases, and severe types of septic shock.
- the Gram-negative cocci notably the Neisseriae, cause gonorrhea and meningicoccal meningitis.
- the methods and compositions of the invention are used to inhibit growth, particularly of antibiotic resistant bacteria.
- MDR multi-drug resistant
- numerous bacterial pathogens of great importance to civilization have become multi-drug resistant (MDR), and these MDR strains have spread rapidly around the world.
- MDR multi-drug resistant
- MDR tuberculosis e.g., immunocompromised as well as non-immunocompromised patients in our era are dying within the first month or so after the onset of symptoms, despite the use of as many as 11 different antibiotics.
- Genetic variability in bacteria may also be created by acquisition of foreign DNA carried by plasmids, bacteriophages, or transposable genetic elements.
- An example of this phenomenon is the spread of a tetracycline-resistant transposon among Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Mycoplasma hominis, and Ureaplasma urealyticum. These mechanisms allow bacteria the potential to develop resistance to a conventional antibiotic. See Beers and Borkow (eds. 2003) The Merck Manual (17th ed.) Merck.
- the diagnosis of bacterial colonization or infections assists in understanding the basis of infectious disease pathological symptoms.
- the detection and characterization of the local flora can be useful to determine the components and effects attributable to presence of infectious diseases.
- the genetic composition of the various strains and the interactions between strains and the host contribute to the resulting microbiological environment.
- Initial diagnosis of potential or actual infectious agents, e.g., bacteria typically leads to treatment strategies and methods.
- the ability to diagnose a bacterial infection can be used to identify the causative agent and treatment methods which can be appropriate to the specific infection.
- the present invention also provides methods to diagnose bacterial populations or infections using anti-bacterial phages.
- the method is based, in large part, on specific interactions between an anti-bacterial phage and a target bacterium.
- Those of skill will recognize methods to label anti-bacterial phages and to use labeled anti-bacterial phages to detect a target bacterium in a biological sample from a subject suspected of having a bacterial infection.
- certain engineered constructs may be attached to specificity conferring tail components which provide high detectability, e.g., like antibody molecules attached to enzymes.
- Such tail-enzyme or tail-label constructs may take advantage of high turnover reactions to provide strong signals and high detection senstivity upon target bacterium interaction.
- the specificity reagents may allow imaging strategies to localize the distributions of bacterial populations.
- Anti-bacterial phages of the present invention are useful to treat bacterial infections caused by a target bacterium.
- the anti-bacterial phages are unable to replicate in the target bacterium, the anti-bacterial phages can be administered in a defined dose.
- Anti-bacterial phages are also particularly useful as anti-bacterial agents in an environment where bacterial growth is not desired or is considered to be harmful.
- anti-bacterial phage preparations can be used to sterilize, including medical settings, operating room suites, food preparation areas, particularly areas where raw meat, e.g., beef, lamb, poultry, pork, or fish is handled. They may also be used to sterilize heat sensitive objects, medical devices, and tissue implants, including transplant organs.
- Non-replicating phage constructs can be generated by making intact phage, and ⁇ removing or inactivating the genetic material.
- Methods for removing the nucleic acid include, e.g., osmotic shock, freeze thaw, chemical treatment, or mechanical removal. Such may destroy the nucleic acid or allow it to escape.
- the phage coat may reassemble and reseal, or the DNA containing head segment of a phage may be lost. In many cases, the attaching and killing functions of the fragmented phage will be retained, while the genetic capacity of the composition is absent.
- the intact phage may be subjected to shear, and the separated tails purified away from other fragments.
- Osmotic shock of phage may be performed, e.g., with salts or sugars. Freeze-thaw cycles of phage may result in mechanical or other fragmentation forces which allow for functional separation of the attaching/killing functions (e.g., provided by phage tails) and the genetic replication function. Chemical treatments of phage have also been observed to fragment the phage, e.g., treatment with LiCl or other salts; EDTA and/or other chelating agents; organic salts; amino acids; and reducing agents. Mechanical methods of fragmenting phage are available, including, e.g., shearing, lyophilization, sonication, microwave treatment, and others.
- D ⁇ A modifying reagents can destroy the functional capacity of nucleic acids in phage, by preventing replication of the nucleic acid itself, by preventing assembly of an intact phage, by preventing release of phage from an infected bacterium, or by preventing the replication of genetically competent phage.
- Methods of chemical destruction of phage nucleic acids are found in the following references: Watanabe, et al. (1985) Agric. Biol. Chem.
- a replication incompetent phage lacks detectable nucleic acid component entirely.
- These have been referred to as "ghosts" in certain studies on phage structure and the components functionally required to achieve infection processes.
- Intact phage may be fragmented, and the tail portions which are involved in the binding and killing of target bacteria are often retained.
- the phage particles may be harvested from their infective cycles before the phage are completely assembled according to the genetic program for production and assembly of the phage within the bacterial host.
- the phage can be harvested after tail assembly, but temporally before attachment of the heads which contain genetic material.
- phage can have disabled or incomplete phage genomes, e.g., prophages. Such phage may be intact, but lack critical parts of the genome, e.g., critical replication or assembly proteins. Simple embodiments include phage with genetic lesions or insertions in one or more critical genes. More complex embodiments include phage with termination codons in critical genes, which prevent expression or function of the gene products. Significant genetic deletions are also available, for which reversion mutations should be extremely rare. However, many of the genetically deficient phage may need to be produced with helper phage, or special complementing production host systems to provide the mutated function.
- phage may be provided with additional functions which prevent replication, in which host production systems may inactivate those functions, e.g., restriction or phage exclusion systems.
- additional functions which prevent replication, in which host production systems may inactivate those functions, e.g., restriction or phage exclusion systems.
- means to prevent genetic transfer between the host and the phage would be desired.
- yet another means to provide replication incompetent phage is to have phage with nucleic acids which are degraded before replication, e.g., susceptible to restriction enzymes encoded in the target bacteria, but which contain a gene which can kill the target bacterium before the phage DNA is destroyed.
- phage with nucleic acids which are degraded before replication, e.g., susceptible to restriction enzymes encoded in the target bacteria, but which contain a gene which can kill the target bacterium before the phage DNA is destroyed.
- a toxic protein / peptide into the head during packaging or in vitro (e.g., fusion with a DNA binding protein), which is then injected along with the DNA; or have a toxic protein expressed from a natural phage early promoter, which will be one of the earliest products, e.g., compatible holin or other membrane damaging proteins or peptides.
- Such can be generated by producing phage in modification incompetent host production cells with a suppressor of the killing gene, e.g., an antisense system.
- the phage may contain a "suicide" activity, e.g., a DNase gene, which causes destruction of both the phage and its host, but the phage is produced in a host production cell where the activity is ineffective, e.g., due to antisense message expression, or from lack of presence of a necessary cofactor.
- specific production host strains may be important in production of the specific phage of the invention.
- critical assembly genes may be deleted from the phage but provided by the production host and, in these embodiments, the phage are capable of being produced only in such host.
- Helper phage are another strategy to complement a deficiency (or addition), but means to prevent genetic recombination into the phage genome would be advantageous.
- phage mutations and complementing host or phage include, e.g., (1) phage comprising termination mutations and complementing host or helper phage comprising tRNA suppressors; (2) phage comprising mutations in genes critical for replication and complementing host or helper phage, e.g., comprising sequences that complement the mutation; (3) phage comprising insertion mutations and complementing host or helper phage, e.g., that comprise suppressors of the mutations; (4) phage comprising deletion mutations and complementing host or helper phage that, e.g., comprise suppressors of the mutations; and (5) phage comprising a suicide gene which kills both the phage and the target upon infection and insensitive or suppressor host producer or helper phage, e.g., containing antisense mRNA constructs.
- phage fragments can be assembled in vitro from purified protein components and used as anti-bacterial phage compounds, e.g., tail assemblies. Or the in vivo assembly of intact phage may be interrupted at a point where only tail assemblies have formed, e.g, before heads are attached. Alternatively, fragments may be made from purified proteins assembled in vitro, e.g., after large scale polypeptide synthesis methods. Particular scaffolding proteins or assembly activities may also need to be incorporated into the assembly vessels, though they may be needed only in very low stoichiometric quantities.
- the tail structure has a tube, a sheath covering the tube, tail fibres, and base plate.
- Each of these structures are made of or contain different proteins.
- This structure in nature helps the phage to sense a bacterium, locate a receptor on its surface, bind to it, and then aid the release of DNA into the cell.
- the symmetry, stoichiometry, components, and composition can be modified to identify a minimum structure that is required for particular functions, e.g., specific adsorption (for diagnostic and imaging applications) or to kill a target cell. These likely do not need the entire natural structure.
- phage head and tails can be separated using a variety of techniques, e.g., based on physical properties of the phage heads and tails, e.g., separation by size, charge, or other properties. For example, only phage heads contain nucleic acids and this can be exploited in separation by, e.g., gradient centrifugation. Other separation techniques, based largely on protein purification techniques follow.
- an initial salt fractionation can separate many of the unwanted phage components (or proteins derived from the cell culture media) from the antibacterial phage tails
- the preferred salt is ammonium sulfate.
- Ammonium sulfate precipitates proteins and protein complexes by effectively reducing the amount of water in the protein mixture. Proteins and protein complexes then precipitate on the basis of their solubility. The more hydrophobic a protein or complex is, the more likely it is to precipitate at lower ammonium sulfate concentrations.
- a typical protocol includes adding saturated ammonium sulfate to a protein solution so that the resultant ammonium sulfate concentration is between 20-30%.
- the molecular weight of the anti-bacterial phage can be used to isolate it from phage components of greater and lesser size using ultrafiltration through membranes of different pore size (for example, Amicon or Millipore membranes) or by sedimentation methods.
- the phage mixture is ultraftltered through a membrane with a pore size that has a lower molecular weight cut-off than the molecular weight of the protein/complex of interest.
- the retentate of the ultrafiltration is then ultrafiltered against a membrane with a molecular cut off greater than the molecular weight of the protein/complex of interest.
- the desired complex will pass through the membrane into the filtrate.
- the filtrate can then be chromatographed.
- the phage components can also be separated from each other on the basis of its size, net surface charge, hydrophobicity, and affinity for ligands.
- antibodies raised against phage components can be conjugated to column matrices and the proteins immunopurified or immunoselected. These methods are well known in the art. It will be apparent to one of skill that chromatographic techniques can be performed at many different scales and using equipment from many different manufacturers (e.g., Pharmacia Biotech). C. Therapeutic treatment using anti-bacterial phages
- the present invention can be applied across the spectrum of bacterial diseases, so that phage derived compositions are developed that are specific for each of the bacterial strains of interest. See, e.g., Merril, et al., Pat. App. US 2003/0026785 and Loomis and Fischetti, Pat. App. US 2002/0187136, each of which is herein incorporated by reference for all purposes. In that way, a full array of compositions is developed for virtually all the bacterial (and other applicable) pathogens for man, his pets, livestock and zoo animals (whether mammal, avian, or pisciculture).
- Phage derived therapy will then be available, e.g, 1) as an adjunct to or as a replacement for those antibiotics and/or chemotherapeutic drugs that are no longer functioning in a bacteriostatic or bactericidal manner, e.g., due to the development of multi-drug resistance; 2) as a treatment for those patients who are allergic or intolerant to the antibiotics and/or chemotherapeutic drugs that would otherwise be indicated; and/or 3) as a treatment that has fewer or differently tolerable side effects than many of the antibiotics and/or chemotherapeutic drugs that would otherwise be indicated for a given infection.
- Another embodiment of the present invention is the development of methods to treat bacterial infections in animals through phage derived therapy with the compositions described above.
- bacteriophages and the bacterial species they infect are known in the art.
- the present invention is not limited to a specific bacteriophage or a specific bacteria. Rather, the present invention can be utilized to develop bacteriophage derived compositions which can be used to treat many infections caused by their host bacteria.
- the present invention can be used to treat most bacterial infections in an animal, it is particularly contemplated that the methods described herein will be very useful as a therapy (adjunctive or stand-alone) in infections caused by drug-resistant bacteria.
- compositions will be particularly useful in treating macrophage intracellular bacterial infections such as tuberculosis, leprosy, Brucella, and Listeria. See, e.g., Broxmeyer, et al. (2002) J. Infect. Dis. 186: 1155-60; and Greer (Oct. 22, 2002) TB and
- a phage strain capable of doing direct or indirect harm to a bacteria (or other pathogen) is contemplated as useful in the present invention.
- phages that are lytic, phages that are temperate but can later become lytic, and nonlytic phages that can deliver a product that will be harmful to the bacteria are all useful in the present invention.
- lysogenic prophage may be excellent sources for screening for constructs having the desired specificity of killing, while not being capable of replicating.
- Animals to be treated by the methods of the present invention include but are not limited to man, his domestic pets, livestock, work animals, pisciculture, and the animals in zoos and aquatic parks (such as whales and dolphins).
- Anti-bacterial phage can also be used to treat bacterial infections in plants, and potentially as diagnostic or sterilization reagents.
- compositions of the present invention can be used as a stand-alone therapy or as an adjunctive therapy, e.g., for the treatment of bacterial populations.
- Numerous antimicrobial agents including antibiotics and chemotherapeutic agents
- suitable antimicrobial agents and the bacterial infections which can be treated with the specified antimicrobial agents are known. See, e.g., Merril, et al., Pat. App. US 2003/0026785, page 5.
- the present invention is not limited to the antimicrobial agents listed, as one skilled in the art could easily determine other antimicrobial agents useful in combination with these compositions.
- D. Methods to identify anti-bacterial phages are known which would be useful in combination with these compositions for treating bacterial-based disorders.
- suitable antimicrobial agents and the bacterial infections which can be treated with the specified antimicrobial agents. See, e.g., Merril, et al., Pat. App. US 2003/0026785, page 5.
- the present invention is not limited to the antimicrobial agents listed
- a method to identify an anti-bacterial phage will begin by identifying a target bacterium.
- Methods to identify a phage that infects a target bacterium e.g., a wild-type, naturally occurring phage, are known to those of skill in the art.
- the methods described herein can be used to isolate, identify, or produce a form of the wild-type naturally occurring phage that kills the target bacterium, but lacks replication activity in the target bacterium, i.e., an anti-bacterial phage.
- the present invention allows for production of therapeutically useful compositions derived from the broad availability of natural phage.
- phage parts may be sufficient to provide many of the functional properties of phage leads to the combinatorial mixing of components of phage which normally do not interact. By mixing components which normally do not interact, the potential to generate new specificities arises. This presents the possibility of using mutagenesis strategies to create tail-like specificities of extraordinarily broad or narrow specificities. And may compete with antibodies as a new technology to generate specificity reagents of high affinity, selectivity, and of highly predictable functions.
- phage adsorption to cell surface receptors has been well studied in Escherichia coli and other Gram-negative bacteria.
- Major outer membrane components which determine the structure and the barrier function of the membrane of Gram-negative bacteria are receptors for many bacteriophages.
- LPS the major component of the outer membrane of Enterobacteria
- the other component of the outer membrane frequently used as a phage receptor component is the OmpA protein.
- Different sites of the OmpA protein are targetted by different phages, particularly of the T-even group.
- a large group of phage receptors are the porin proteins, which are discovered in 32 species of bacteria.
- phage adsorption almost always involves the cell surface carbohydrates and specific studies have been carried out for phages of Lactococcus species. Most staphylococcal phages contact the teichoic acids on the cell surface.
- phage tails have peculiar symmetries, typically 4-fold or 6-fold, the binding characteristics of the intact tail are different from the individual protein components.
- the high local density of high affinity binding sites to the target receptor on the bacterial membrane should provide certain properties analogous to "tetramer" constucts using the T- cell receptor.
- the localized affinity may be extraordinarily high, even if the affinity of each interaction is low.
- mixing of different binding domains may allow for interesting reagents which detect spatially constrained target features, or "epitopes".
- a number of other interesting properties of the anti-bacterial phage of this invention may be different from the parental intact phage from which they may be derived.
- the anti-bacterial phage may infect both restriction-modification permissive and resistant target bacteria.
- the mechanism of killing may be different such that the restriction- modification activities of the target are irrelevant to the anti-bacterial phage.
- the intact phage typically kill only upon lysis of the target, which occurs after DNA replication and phage replication.
- the anti-bacterial phage often kill essentially upon binding to the specific receptors, e.g., due to failure of resealing of the cell membrane after piercing to allow phage DNA entrance into the target cell.
- certain formulations or combinations with other antimicrobials are incompatible with the parental phage killing mechanism, which are not limited from the different kinetics and mechanism of killing by the anti-bacterial phage.
- the anti-bacterial phage can often infect and kill target bacteria which possess superinfection-immunity to the parental phage, as shown in the Examples below.
- physiology or genetic and protein engineering strategies may be applied to change the pharmacokinetics and pharrnacodynamics of the tail constructs.
- PEG, liposomes, or colloidal carriers may affect the clearance mechanisms and processes. Changes to domains which regulate clearance, lifetime, body compartment accessibility, solubility properties, absorption, administration, stability, and other physical or physiological properties may be applied.
- the route of administration and dosage will vary with the target bacteria, the site and extent of colonization (e.g., local or systemic), and the subject being treated.
- the routes of administration include but are not limited to: oral, aerosol or other device for delivery to the lungs, nasal spray, ocular, eye drops, intravenous (IN), intramuscular, intraperitoneal, intrathecal, vaginal, rectal, topical, lumbar puncture, intrathecal, and direct application to the brain and/or meninges. Excipients which can be used as a vehicle for the delivery of the phage will be apparent to those skilled in the art.
- anti-bacterial phage could be in lyophilized form and be dissolved just prior to administration, e.g., by IN injection.
- the dosage of administration is contemplated to be in the range of about 1 thousand to about 10 trillion/kg/day, and preferably about 1 trillion/kg/day, and maybe from about 106 killing units/kg/day to about 1013 killing units/kg/day, but may vary upon route of administration.
- the phage are typically administered in amounts or until successful elimination of the pathogenic bacteria is achieved.
- the invention contemplates single dosage forms, as well as multiple dosage forms of the compositions of the invention, as well as methods for accomplishing delivery of such single and multi-dosage forms, including sustained release.
- the phage composition is. typically incorporated into an aerosol formulation specifically designed for administration to the lungs by inhalation.
- Many such aerosols are known in the art, and the present invention is not limited to any particular formulation.
- An example of such an aerosol is the ProventilD inhaler manufactured by Schering-Plough, the propellant of which contains trichloromonofluoromethane, dichlorodifluoromethane, and oleic acid.
- the concentrations of the propellant ingredients and emulsifiers are adjusted if necessary based on the phage composition being used in the treatment.
- the number of phage to be administered per aerosol treatment will be typically in the range of 106 to 1013 killing units, and preferably 1012 killing units. [KLB: this doesn't match the dose/kg indicated above]
- Methods to evaluate the replication capacity of a construct can use normal plaque forming assays. Typically, the inactivation will decrease the replication capacity by at least 3 fold, and may affect it by 10, 30, 100, 300, etc., to many orders of magnitude. Preferred genetic inactivation efficiencies may be 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, or more log units. VI. FORMULATIONS
- the invention further contemplates pharmaceutical compositions comprising at least one bacteriophage of the invention provided in a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient.
- the formulations and pharmaceutical compositions of the invention thus contemplate formulations comprising an isolated bacteriophage specific for a bacterial host; a mixture of two, three, five, ten, or twenty or more bacteriophage that infect target bacterial hosts; and a mixture of two, three, five, ten, or twenty or more bacteriophage that infect different bacterial hosts or different strains of the same bacterial host, (e.g., a mixture of bacteriophage that collectively infect and inhibit the growth of multiple strains of Staphylococcus aureus).
- the compositions of the invention can be tailored to the needs of the patient, as an individual or as a member of a defined set of patients.
- terapéuticaally effective dose herein is meant a dose that produces effects for which it is administered.
- the exact dose will depend on the purpose of the treatment, and will be ascertainable by one skilled in the art using known techniques (e.g., Ansel, et al. (1992) Pharmaceutical Dosage Forms and Drug Delivery Lieberman, Pharmaceutical Dosage Forms (vols. 1-3), Dekker, ISBN 0824770846, 082476918X, 0824712692, 0824716981; Lloyd (1999) The Art, Science and Technology of Pharmaceutical Compounding; and Pickar (1999) Dosage Calculations).
- Adjustments e.g., for protein degradation, systemic versus localized delivery, and rate of new protease synthesis, as well as the age, body weight, general health, sex, diet, time of administration, drug interaction and the severity of the condition may be necessary, and will be ascertainable with routine experimentation by those skilled in the art.
- pharmaceutically acceptable excipient includes a material which, when combined with an active ingredient of a composition, allows the ingredient to retain biological activity and without causing undue disruptive reactions with the subject.
- Exemplary pharmaceutically carriers include sterile aqueous or non-aqueous solutions, suspensions, and emulsions. Examples include, but are not limited to, standard pharmaceutical excipients such as a phosphate buffered saline solution, water, emulsions such as oil/water emulsion, and various types of wetting agents. Examples of non-aqueous solvents are propylene glycol, polyethylene glycol, vegetable oils such as olive oil, and injectable organic esters such as ethyl oleate.
- Aqueous carriers include water, alcoholic/ aqueous solutions, emulsions or suspensions, including saline and buffered media.
- Parenteral vehicles include sodium chloride solution, Ringer's dextrose, dextrose and sodium chloride, lactated Ringer's or fixed oils.
- Intravenous vehicles include fluid and nutrient replenishers, electrolyte replenishers (such as those based on Ringer's dextrose), and the like.
- a composition comprising a bacteriophage of the invention may also be lyophilized using means well known in the art, for subsequent reconstitution and use according to the invention.
- compositions for liposomal delivery and formulations comprising microencapsulated bacteriophage, e.g., which may provide sustained release kinetics or allow oral ingestion to pass through the stomach.
- compositions comprising such excipients are formulated by well known conventional methods (see, e.g., Remington 's Pharmaceutical Sciences, Chapter 43, 14th Ed., Mack Publishing Col, Easton PA 18042, USA).
- the pharmaceutical compositions can be prepared in various forms, such as granules, tablets, pills, suppositories, capsules (e.g. adapted for oral delivery) , microbeads, microspheres, liposomes, suspensions, salves, lotions, and the like.
- compositions comprising the therapeutically-active compounds.
- Common diluents include aqueous media, vegetable and animal oils, and fats. Stabilizing agents, wetting and emulsifying agents, salts for varying the osmotic pressure, or buffers for securing an adequate pH value may be included.
- the pharmaceutical composition can comprise other components in addition to the phage.
- the pharmaceutical compositions may comprise a plurality of phage, e.g., two, three, five, or ten or more different phage, where the different phage may be specific for the same or different target bacteria.
- the pharmaceutical composition can contain multiple (e.g., at least two or more) defined phage, wherein at least two of the phage in the composition have different bacterial target specificity.
- the phage composition can be adapted for treating a mixed infection of different bacteria, e.g., by selecting different groups of phage of differing specificity so as to contain at least one phage for each bacteria (e.g., strain, species, etc.) suspected or likely to be present in the affected site.
- the phage can be administered in conjunction with other therapeutic agents, such as an inflammatory or conventional antimicrobial agent.
- it may be desirable to administer the phage and another therapeutic, e.g., antibiotic, within the same formulation.
- Example 1 Methods of inactivating or removing nucleic acid to make anti-bacterial phage. a. Osmotic shock treatment
- Nucleic acids can be released from phage upon osmotic shock treatment. Phage are prepared and subjected to osmotic shock at an appropriate temperature, e.g., low temperature, and for an appropriate amount of time, e.g., 1-60 minutes, depending upon the phage type and strain. See, e.g., Minagawa (1977) Virology 76:234-245 (NaCI shock) or Szewczyk and Skorko (1981) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 662:131-137 (sucrose shock). Other osmotic agents can be used, and the shock medium may be supplemented with, e.g., appropriate amounts of nucleases, proteases, protease inhibitors, etc.
- the intact, replication competent phage are removed from the preparation. Such can be achieved, e.g., by size or weight based separation methods. A preferred method is density separation, as the phage particles lacking nucleic acid differentially separate from intact particles. The inactivated anti-bacterial phage are collected and confirmed still specific and capable of killing, and the intact phage my be collected or discarded. Intact phage may be useful as starting materials for a second shock treatment, or for diagnostic or other uses where the replication capacity may be useful. b. EDTA treatment
- Phage subjected to EDTA treatment yield DNA deficient phage.
- EDTA treated phage retain target bacterium binding capacity, and kill target bacteria. See, e.g., Konopa and Taylor (1975) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 399:460-467.
- the treated phage are subjected to purification methods to separate intact, replication competent phage from anti-bacterial phage that lack nucleic acid using e.g., density separation.
- Phage subjected to lyophilization become replication deficient, while retaining target bacterium killing capacity. See, e.g., Shapira and Kohn (1974) Cryobiology 11 :452- 464; and Clark and Geary (1973) Cryobiology 10:351-360.
- the treated phage are subjected to purification methods to separate intact, replication competent phage from anti-bacterial phage that lack nucleic acid using e.g., density separation. e. Microwave treatment
- Exposure of bacteriophage to microwave irradiation can diminish the replication capacity of a phage. See, e.g., Kikita, et al. (1995) Microbiol. Immunol. 39:571-576; and Watanabe, et al. (2000) Jett. Appl. Microbiol. 31:52-56.
- the treated phage are subjected to purification methods to separate intact, replication competent phage from anti-bacterial phage that lack nucleic acid using, e.g., density separation.
- UV or X-ray irradiation treatment UV or X-ray irradiation treatment
- Irradiation by UV or X-rays inactivates the replication capacity of phage.
- the treated phage are subjected to purification methods to separate intact, replication competent phage from anti-bacterial phage that lack nucleic acid using e.g., density separation. g. D-glucosamine treatment
- D-glucosamine treatment of phage inactivates the replication competence of phage, while retaining the killing capacity. See, e.g., Watanabe, et al. (1985) Agr. Biol. Chem. 49:63-70; and Yamaguchi, et al. (1998) Biol. Pharm. Bull. 21:205-209.
- the reagent introduces breaks into the nucleic acid, thereby preventing its replication.
- the treated phage are subjected to purification methods to separate intact, replication competent phage from anti-bacterial phage that lack nucleic acid, e.g., using density separation. h. Isolation of tails
- Phage tails are most directly obtained from induction of a prophage-containing bacterial strain using mitomycin C or similar DNA-damaging chemicals. The prophage is induced and undergoes replication, while tails are assembled. No heads are synthesized because of a defect in a head assembly pathway. Thus, upon lysis, many tails are produced but no heads.
- a similar "tails" production strategy involves isolating phage with conditional mutations in head gene expression or function.
- the mutant phage are grown up until the last step in production on suppressor hosts or under suppressing conditions.
- the simplest idea is to isolate temperature-sensitive mutants of the phage which have a temperature sensitive- mutation in an essential head gene. These mutant phages can be then grown under non- suppressing conditions, to generate the tail preparations. i. Specific phage and host combinations
- Phage which have defects in genes necessary for packaging genetic material will produce phage assemblies which lack genetic material, e.g., prophages.
- Variants can be isolated which exhibit mutations, e.g., point, deletion, insertion, etc., in critical head structure or head assembly genes, but, which do not affect production of the tail portions that are responsible for the binding and killing functions.
- Lytic phage that are conditional producers of the nucleic acid packaging components can be isolated or engineered.
- termination codons or temperature sensitive mutants can be identified or engineered to produce the phage particles under permissive conditions or in permissive hosts.
- Termination suppressor hosts or temperature sensitive hosts can allow production, while neither phage would be capable of replicating in the target bacterial hosts.
- Means to prevent transfer of the permissive factors into the phage genome are devised to minimize the possibility of recombination creating replication competent phage.
- normal phage are produced in production hosts which are engineered to produce or assemble only the killing, e.g., tail, components. This is achieved, e.g., by blocking structural or assembly genes critical for assembly of the head components, e.g., by plasmids that express an antisense version of the target genes.
- the methods a-i can be combined to produce and enrich for replication incompetent phage, i.e., anti-bacterial phage.
- separation steps may be used to remove intact, replication competent phage.
- Further additional steps of nucleic acid removal or inactivation can be included to reduce the amounts of intact phage which may copurify with the replication incompetent anti-bacterial phage.
- P9042 and P954 exemplary bacteriophages isolated from a natural water source, were used to establish operability of the present strategy, These phage propagate in the strain Staphylococcus aureus and have been so designated based on a labeling system adopted to categorize and number phages in the Gangagen phage library.
- P9042 is a lytic phage
- P954 is a lysogenic phage.
- P9042 and P954 are examples of phages that were isolated from nature, and similar selection and isolation procedures should provide other phage with similar desired combinations of properties, as appropriate.
- A. Tail-specific activity assay for lytic phage tail preparations S. simulans (10E7) cells were suspended in a volume of 100 ⁇ l. The suspension was treated with either the P9042 wild phage or the P9042 tail preparation, in a total volume of 200 ⁇ l. Each assay was performed in triplicate in a microtiter plate. The samples were incubated at 37° C for 20 min, the OD 630 absorbance checked for each sample, and the sample plated on an LB plate. The plates were incubated at 37° C overnight, and the residual c.f.u. (i.e., resistant cells) were quantitated.
- P9042 capsid gene expression was targeted by this method using a Vegll promoter which allowed P9042 capsid antisense RNA to be produced constitutively and which thereby would inhibit translation of the P9042 capsid gene.
- the P9042 capsid gene was cloned into a Staphylococcus aureus vector (designated ⁇ GMB300) in reverse orientation to the Vegll promoter. This clone construct was designated pGMB331. This vector construct was engineered to provide the following features: an E. coli - S. aureus shuttle vector constructed by cloning S.
- aureus plasmid pC194 into the Hindlll site of E.coli plasmid pRSetA; a constitutive vegetative promoter, Vegll, which functions in both E. coli and S. aureus; a beta lactamase marker for selection in E. coli; and a chloramphenicol acyl-transferase marker for selection in S.aureus.
- Vegll constitutive vegetative promoter
- a beta lactamase marker for selection in E. coli
- chloramphenicol acyl-transferase marker for selection in S.aureus.
- the host RN4220, a derivative of 8325-4, a prophage cured, restriction deficient S. aureus strain was obtained from Dr. Richard Novick (Skirball Institute, New York).
- the pGMB331 plasmid was introduced into electrocompetent-RN4220 using standard procedures. See Bio-Rad Micropulser instruction manual. Chloramphenicol resistant transformants were isolated, and the presence of the intact pGMB331 plasmid in the transformants was confirmed by P9042 capsid gene PCR. Selected transformants were grown at 37° C to OD600 of about 0.6. Cells were infected with P9042 phage at an input ratio of 0.5. After 40 min (latent period of P9042 is 40-45 minutes), the infected culture was centrifuged at 8000 rpm for 10 min.
- the supernatant was discarded and the cell pellet was washed with culture broth, then resuspended in 1/50 volume of culture broth.
- the cells were sonicated and the lysate centrifuged, and the supernatant was analyzed for the presence of phage tails.
- Staphylococcus simulans was used as target host to determine the killing activity of P9042 tails.
- Phage P9042 is capable of infecting S. simulans but is incapable of propagating in this same host. These cells therefore exhibit receptors for attachment of the phage but do not allow replication of the phage (due to a resident restriction-modification system that inactivates the nucleic acids).
- a tail preparation is devoid of capsid and associated nucleic acids and is thus not subject to this phenomenon of DNA restriction or degradation.
- tail possesses essentially the same receptor and machinery for effective adsorption and infection to target bacteria, the action of a capsid-less phage "tail" on the bacterial cells renders the tail assemblies "non-viable", or replication deficient.
- the antibacterial phage product (tails) can kill both restriction-modification permissive and resistant target bacteria, whereas the parent bacteriophage nucleic acid is inactivated by restriction and is replication ineffective (both DNA replication and phage replication) in such bacteria.
- the sonicated cell supernatant was also checked by routine plaque test to evaluate the presence of whole assembled P9042 phage that escaped the antisense-mediated inhibition. This analysis indicated that the antisense lysate exhibited about 2% of the residual colony forming units (c.f.u.) of the wild type phage lysate, indicating that the antisense strategy decreased the production of replication competent phage by 98%, or some two orders of magnitude. Electron microscope analysis of the samples confirmed the presence of tail-like structures.
- P9042 phage in the wild phage lysate did not kill S. simulans at an input ratio as high as 10, whereas the antisense lysate decreased the c.f.u. on S. simulans by 98%.
- the soluble phage constructs maintained selectivityof killing, while exhibiting decreased replication capacity of the phage on that host.
- Tail assemblies may be harvested by lysing host cells at a time point prior to the attachment of tail assemblies with head assemblies into intact phage particles.
- the host bacteria RN4220 was grown at 37° C to OD600 of 1.0.
- the host were infected with P9042 at a 0.5 multiplicity of infection (m.o.i.) at 37° C.
- Infected samples of host cells were removed after 15, 30, and 40 min and chilled. Each sample was centrifuged in cold at 8000 rpm for 10 min and the cell pellets were washed with LB. Each pellet was resuspended in l/20th of initial volume of LB, and the samples sonicated. The supernatant was checked for the presence of tails as described. Electron microscope analyses of the samples confirmed the presence of tail-like structures.
- the resulting colonies were inoculated into 96 well plates and incubated overnight at 37° C.
- the overnight cultures were sub-cultured into 96 well plates and incubated at 37° C for two hr.
- Each of the 96 cultures were grown to a lawn, and 2 ⁇ l of P954 lysate was spread on each lawn and incubated at 30° C. After 3 h, plates were evaluated for lysis. Cells that were not susceptible to phage P954 were characterized as lysogenised (e.g., immune).
- Phage titers of a lysogen, P954-RN4220#A were monitored at different time points after Mitomycin C (MitC) induction. Tail preparation were made.
- Mitomycin C Mitomycin C
- the lysogen was subcultured overnight, and grown to OD600 of 1.0 at 37° C.
- the culture was induced with 1 mg/ml of MitC at 37° C.
- Samples were removed at various time intervals, e.g., at 30 min, 60 min, 2 h, 3 h, and 4 h. Each sample was centrifuged at 7000 rpm for 10 min, and cell pellets resuspended in 1 ml of LB broth. The cell pellets were then lysed with glass beads. Phage titers were checked on a lawn of RN4220 target bacteria.
- Intracellular phage were evaluated (pfu/ml) at each time point; at 0.5 h lxlOE6; at 1 h 5x10E6; at 2 h lxl 0E7; at 3 h 2.5x10E7; and at 4 h 4x10E6.
- the culture was lysed after 4 h of MitC induction. Thus, no significant difference in phage titer was seen at different time points.
- S. aureus strain B935 was used to evaluate the extent of tail based killing from lysates of lysogenized hosts. Lysates at various time points after MitC induction were analysed for tail based killing, as described.
- the 2 hour sample contains phage tails that kill Staphylococcus aureus B935, while wild P954 phage is unable to kill the same strain even at input ratio of 100.
- the protective mechanism provided by the lysogenic integration exhibits selective immunity.
- Phage P954 is capable of infecting a spectrum of Staphylococcus aureus isolates, e.g., B935, B904, B913, B920, B903, B975, and B972 (the "P954-tail-killing test panel”); but is incapable of propagating in these isolates.
- Each of these isolates thus harbors receptors for attachment of the phage, but do not allow replication of the phage, e.g., due to a resident prophage.
- This immunity phenomenon is known as "immunity to superinfection" and is described extensively in literature. See e.g., Bertani (1953) Genetics 38:653; Bertani and Bertani (1971) Adv. Genet.
- Immunity to an infective phage is typically brought about by presence of a similar prophage that induces inactivating the incoming phage DNA. The presence of such a prophage in each of the above isolates was confirmed by PCR detection of P954 phage-specific DNA sequences in its genome.
- a tail preparation is devoid of capsid protein and/or associated nucleic acids, and is therefore not subject to this phenomenon of inactivating incoming phage DNA.
- the action of a capsid-less phage "tail" assembly on the bacterial cells renders them incapable of either phage or DNA replication, e.g., providing the characteristic of "defined dose”.
- the antibacterial phage product tails
- the antibacterial phage product can kill many, and perhaps virtually all, target bacteria isolates that possess "superinfection-immunity" to the parent bacteriophage.
- the parent bacteriophage is inactivated in such bacteria.
- the tail assembly may exhibit a broader target killing range than the natural parental phage.
- P954-tail-killing test panel isolates of S. aureus (10E7) cells were suspended in a volume of 100 ⁇ l and treated with test samples, either P954 wild phage at an input ratio of 10 or P954 from 2 h lysate (tail preparation). Each assay was done in triplicate in a microtiter plate in a total assay volume of 200 ⁇ l. The cultures were incubated for 1 h at 37° C on a shaker at 200 rpm. OD630 absorbance of each sample was checked. Each sample was plated on an LB plate and incubated at 37° C overnight. Residual c.f.u., i.e., bacteria which avoided being killed, were determined.
- results are listed as follows: isolate (P954 intact phage residual % c.f.u., 2 h lysate tail preparation residual % c.f.u.). B935 (90, 3); B904 (95, 7); B913 (95, 11); B920 (98, 3); B903 (72, 0.3); B975 (90, 3); B972 (96, 1.3).
- the susceptibility of each isolate to the intact phage P954 is relatively low (less than 30%) than the susceptibility of each isolate to the lysate tail preparation (more than about 90%).
- the tail prep made according to the protocol described above was subjected to a centrifugation spin using a 300 kDa cutoff membrane. Both the retentate and the filtrate were checked for target bacteria killing by the method described above. Reduction in the absorbance at 630 nm was taken as the measurement of target bacteria killing activity
- P954 tail preparation was subjected to 300 kDa cutoff membrane and the retentate used for killing assay, and done in triplicate.
- the cell control and cells with phage exhibited essentially no killing (because the lysogenic phage imparts immunity).
- the retentate of 300 Kda exhibited about 60% decrease in A630, while the filtrate, e.g., particles of less than about 300 Kda size, exhibited essentially no decrease in A630.
- the P954 lysin in the genomic DNA sequence should encode a protein of about 28 kDa. Thus, it should not be retained in the 300 Kda membrane. Since the retentate lacks killing activity, P954 phage lysin would not be sufficient to effect the killing activity observed. This is consistent with the killing being effected by large molecular weight tail structures.
- a P954 tail preparation was subjected to 300 kDa cutoff membrane and the retentate used for the killing assay, as described above.
- the A630 for the cells alone was about .50; for cells with P954 phage about .43; for cells with P954 tail preparation about .17; for cells with trypsin treated P954 tail preparations about .39; for cells with trypsin alone about .50; and for cells with the 300 Kda filtrate about .40.
- EXAMPLE 5 Tails from a lytic phage P9042 A. Size of P9042 killing activity
- P9042 tails were generated according to the method described earlier.
- the P9042 tail preparation was subjected to 300 kDa cutoff membrane and the retentate was used for sample treatment and the assays.
- EXAMPLE 5 Tails from a lytic phage P9042 A. Size of P9042 killing activity
- P9042 tails were generated according to the method described earlier.
- the P9042 tail preparation was subjected to 300 kDa cutoff membrane and the retentate was used for sample treatment and the assays.
- P9042 tails were not inactivated with trypsin and P9042 tail preparation is unstable after heat treatment.
- the sensitivity of gram positive tails to heat follows the same pattern as their phage types while the frypsin sensitivity is different for different phage tail types.
- one of the tested phage tail prepartions is sensitive to trypsin (the P954)
- the other one exhibits resistance to trypsin action under the tested conditions, indicating that they are different from gram negative naturally occurring tails in Pseudomonas (pyocins) which are reported to be trypsin resistant
- This method describes isolating non-replicating phages which are capable of killing a Staphylococcus target, but is not limited to phages which are directed to such genus of target. Similar methods will be applicable to other target bacteria, e.g., Escherichia, Pseudomonas, Streptococcus, etc. Natural isolates of Staphylococcus are screened for isolates containing one or more lysogenic phage, preferably derived from a tailed phage.
- the screening may be performed by many methods.
- One method is to plate out naturally occurring isolates of target bacteria, e.g., from hospitals or the environment, and screening for low frequency release of the prophage from the bacterial genome, which often occurs upon death of the host cell.
- the resulting lysogenic phage particles are derived from the prophage.
- the host range of the original prophage can be tested on prophage deficient tester strains, e.g., from clinical isolates.
- the corresponding lysogenic phage released from the strain will exhibit similar killing specificity, but normally the final product should be characterized, e.g., by testing for plaque formation on isolates and characterizing host range specificity.
- the sequence may be determined.
- Critical functions may be deleted by engineering or other methods. Alternatively, functions may be added which prevent replication, e.g., restriction enzymes, etc. Head or other phage structures can be identified and mutagenized, preferably by deletion. Deletion will provide the least likelihood of complementation or spontaneous revertsion. Other methods may be also applied to prevent recombination or reversion, e.g., incorporating other mutations or changes which prevent recombination or complementation. Other critical structures or replication functions may also be targeted, e.g., assembly activities.
- Functional prophage may be disrupted by transposon insertion, preferably with a marker such as drug resistance, into the prophage sequence. Since the prophage comprises about 1% of the bacterial genome, about 1% of the transposons incorporated into a genome will be into the prophage sequence. Hybridization, selection, or sequencing methods may be used to determine which transposon integrations are into the prophage. However, if the prophage retains appropriate killing and plaque properties, it likely retains intact tail segments.
- Prophage may also be identified using hybridization probes directed to known head protein sequences. With a head gene detected, the gene can be more specifically characterized, and engineering methods may be applied to delete the gene.
- killing structures are derived, means to prevent replication in the target may be incorporated.
- Into the coding segments may be introduced mutations which prevent DNA or phage replication, or functions may be added which can prevent such in target.
- Other means can be incorporated which require that the structures be made in highly specific host production strains, e.g., with suppressors or complementation.
- tail structures derived from intact phage can be anti-bacterial
- phages accessible from environmental sources serve as starting materials for these killing structures.
- Plentiful natural phage may be screened for appropriate specificity of target killing.
- Construction of head deletions, e.g., by mutagenesis, antisense suppression, or engineered, or preparation of tail portions, e.g., by physical separation of tail portions from other phage parts, will provide a non-replication feature. This provides a significant feature for regulatory approval, i.e., that the dose is defined, and/or does not change upon replication after administration.
- Replication competent contaminants may copurify with, but will typically exhibit different properties from, the defined dose compositions described herein.
- the replication competent contaminants will often contain, or be engineered to express, predicted epitopes absent in the defined dose compositions.
- Antibodies to head proteins can be attached to affinity matrix columns for immunoselection or immunoabsorption purify away intact phages.
- affinity methods may be used to deplete them from the preparation, or enzymatic methods, e.g., proteinases, may be used.
- Engineered susceptible sites on the contaminants should allow means to selectively destroy the undesired contaminants.
- replication competent contaminants will often exhibit different sedimentation properties or size from the defined dose composition. Centrifugation or filtration methods may separate contaminants from the desired compositions.
- EXAMPLE 9 Methods of Determining Anti-bacterial Phage Efficacy and Dosage in animals.
- Target bacteria e.g., P. aeruginosa
- PBS phosphate-buffered saline
- MLD minimal lethal dose
- Mice are inoculated intraperitoneally (IP) with 100 ⁇ l of bacterial suspension. Controls and anti-bacterial phage dilutions in PBS are injected IP 45 min after infection.
- mice receive between 3x10E6 and 3xl0E10 killing units of anti-bacterial phage. Mice are allowed to eat and drink ad libitum throughout the 7 day observation period. Those of skill will recognize that dosages for humans can be extrapolated from the mouse dosages.
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Priority Applications (5)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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CA2541941A CA2541941C (en) | 2003-10-06 | 2004-10-06 | Anti-bacterial phage tail compositions and uses thereof |
EP04816914.8A EP1677834B1 (en) | 2003-10-06 | 2004-10-06 | Defined dose therapeutic phage |
US10/574,812 US20070020240A1 (en) | 2003-10-06 | 2004-10-06 | Defined dose therapeutic phage |
US13/293,034 US20120058211A1 (en) | 2003-10-06 | 2011-11-09 | Defined dose therapeutic phage |
US13/537,616 US20120328576A1 (en) | 2003-10-06 | 2012-06-29 | Defined dose therapeutic phage |
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US50930803P | 2003-10-06 | 2003-10-06 | |
US60/509,308 | 2003-10-06 |
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US10/574,812 A-371-Of-International US20070020240A1 (en) | 2003-10-06 | 2004-10-06 | Defined dose therapeutic phage |
US13/293,034 Continuation US20120058211A1 (en) | 2003-10-06 | 2011-11-09 | Defined dose therapeutic phage |
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WO2005046579A2 true WO2005046579A2 (en) | 2005-05-26 |
WO2005046579A3 WO2005046579A3 (en) | 2005-08-11 |
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EP (1) | EP1677834B1 (en) |
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WO2007128765A2 (en) * | 2006-05-09 | 2007-11-15 | Inve Technologies Nv | Compositions comprising lytic enzymes of bacteriophages for treating bacterial infections |
US7700729B2 (en) | 2006-05-15 | 2010-04-20 | Avidbiotics Corporation | Modified bacteriocins and methods for their use |
US7732586B2 (en) | 2006-05-15 | 2010-06-08 | Avidbiotics Corporation | Modified bacteriocins and methods for their use |
US8178087B2 (en) * | 2006-04-04 | 2012-05-15 | Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique —CNRS | Process of production of bacteriophage compositions and methods in phage therapy field |
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EP1504088B1 (en) * | 2002-03-25 | 2007-08-15 | University Of Warwick | Bacteriophages useful for therapy and prophylaxis of bacterial infections |
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- 2004-10-06 EP EP04816914.8A patent/EP1677834B1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 2004-10-06 WO PCT/US2004/033224 patent/WO2005046579A2/en active Application Filing
- 2004-10-06 US US10/574,812 patent/US20070020240A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2004-10-06 CA CA2541941A patent/CA2541941C/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
-
2011
- 2011-11-09 US US13/293,034 patent/US20120058211A1/en not_active Abandoned
-
2012
- 2012-06-29 US US13/537,616 patent/US20120328576A1/en not_active Abandoned
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EP1677834B1 (en) | 2014-01-08 |
EP1677834A4 (en) | 2007-11-28 |
WO2005046579A3 (en) | 2005-08-11 |
CA2541941A1 (en) | 2005-05-26 |
CA2541941C (en) | 2015-05-26 |
US20070020240A1 (en) | 2007-01-25 |
US20120328576A1 (en) | 2012-12-27 |
EP1677834A2 (en) | 2006-07-12 |
US20120058211A1 (en) | 2012-03-08 |
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