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Are viruses the key to fighting infections?

We are running out of ammunition against certain infections, as bacteria increasingly evade antibiotics. Are phages - viruses that hunt and kill bacteria – part of the solution?

We are running out of ammunition against certain infections, as bacteria increasingly evade the antibiotics we’ve relied on for nearly a century. Could bacteriophages – viruses that hunt and kill bacteria – be part of the solution?

In 2019, CrowdScience travelled to Georgia where bacteriophages, also known as phages, have been used for nearly a hundred years to treat illnesses ranging from a sore throat to cholera. Here we met the scientists who have kept rare phages safe for decades, and are constantly on the look-out for new ones. Phages are fussy eaters: a specific phage will happily chew on one bacteria but ignore another, so hunting down the right one for each infection is vital.

Since then, we’ve lived through a pandemic, the medical landscape has been transformed, and interest in bacteriophages as a treatment option is growing throughout the world. We turn to microbiologist Professor Martha Clokie for updates, including the answer to listener Garry’s question: could phages help in the fight against Covid-19?

Contributors:
Prof Martha Clokie, University of Leicester
Dr Naomi Hoyle, Eliava Phage Therapy Center
Prof Nina Chanishvili, Eliava Institute
Dr Eka Jaiani, Eliava Institute

Presented by Marnie Chesterton
Produced by Cathy Edwards and Louisa Field for the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service

[Photo:Bacteriophages infecting bacteria, illustration. Credit: Getty Images]

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32 minutes

Last on

Mon 18 Jul 2022 23:32GMT

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