Population and evolutionary dynamics of phage therapy.

Bruce R Levin, James J Bull
Author Information
  1. Bruce R Levin: Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30307, USA. blevin@emory.edu

Abstract

Following a sixty-year hiatus in western medicine, bacteriophages (phages) are again being advocated for treating and preventing bacterial infections. Are attempts to use phages for clinical and environmental applications more likely to succeed now than in the past? Will phage therapy and prophylaxis suffer the same fates as antibiotics--treatment failure due to acquired resistance and ever-increasing frequencies of resistant pathogens? Here, the population and evolutionary dynamics of bacterial-phage interactions that are relevant to phage therapy and prophylaxis are reviewed and illustrated with computer simulations.

Grants

  1. R01 GM091875/NIGMS NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Bacterial Infections
Bacteriophages
Biological Evolution
Drug Resistance, Bacterial
Humans
Mathematics
Models, Theoretical

Word Cloud

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