噬菌体、抗crispr蛋白和耐药细菌:我们对这三位一体了解多少?

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q3 IMMUNOLOGY
Andres Ceballos-Garzon, Angela B Muñoz, Juan D Plata, Zilpa A Sanchez-Quitian, Jose Ramos-Vivas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

噬菌体是感染细菌的病毒,依靠它们的遗传机制进行复制。为了在噬菌体的持续攻击中生存下来,细菌已经发展出多种防御策略来对抗它们。然而,噬菌体迅速共同进化以克服这些障碍,导致了一场持续的、经常令人惊讶的分子军备竞赛。因此,一些噬菌体进化出称为抗crispr的蛋白质抑制剂(约50-150个氨基酸),可拮抗细菌CRISPR-Cas免疫反应。迄今为止,已经发现了大约45种具有不同机制和结构的抗crispr蛋白,用于对抗存在于重要动物和人类病原体中的CRISPR-Cas I型和II型,如埃希氏菌、摩根氏菌、克雷伯氏菌、肠球菌、假单胞菌、葡萄球菌和沙门氏菌。考虑到抗生素耐药性的惊人增长,噬菌体治疗,无论是单独治疗还是与抗生素联合治疗,似乎是治疗许多细菌感染的有希望的替代方案。在这篇综述中,我们阐述了使用噬菌体治疗的生物学和临床方面;此外,CRISPR-Cas机制,以及抗crispr蛋白作为对抗细菌的可能武器的有趣活性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Phages, anti-CRISPR proteins, and drug-resistant bacteria: what do we know about this triad?

Phages are viruses that infect bacteria, relying on their genetic machinery to replicate. To survive the constant attack of phages, bacteria have developed diverse defense strategies to act against them. Nevertheless, phages rapidly co-evolve to overcome these barriers, resulting in a constant, and often surprising, molecular arms race. Thus, some phages have evolved protein inhibitors known as anti-CRISPRs (∼50-150 amino acids), which antagonize the bacterial CRISPR-Cas immune response. To date, around 45 anti-CRISPRs proteins with different mechanisms and structures have been discovered against the CRISPR-Cas type I and type II present in important animal and human pathogens such as Escherichia, Morganella, Klebsiella, Enterococcus, Pseudomonas, Staphylococcus, and Salmonella. Considering the alarming growth of antibiotic resistance, phage therapy, either alone or in combination with antibiotics, appears to be a promising alternative for the treatment of many bacterial infections. In this review, we illustrated the biological and clinical aspects of using phage therapy; furthermore, the CRISPR-Cas mechanism, and the interesting activity of anti-CRISPR proteins as a possible weapon to combat bacteria.

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来源期刊
Pathogens and disease
Pathogens and disease IMMUNOLOGY-INFECTIOUS DISEASES
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
3.00%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: Pathogens and Disease publishes outstanding primary research on hypothesis- and discovery-driven studies on pathogens, host-pathogen interactions, host response to infection and their molecular and cellular correlates. It covers all pathogens – eukaryotes, prokaryotes, and viruses – and includes zoonotic pathogens and experimental translational applications.
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