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Showing posts from May 31, 2026

NIH Launches First National Phage Therapy Research Network to Accelerate Treatments Against Antibiotic-Resistant Superbugs

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Media contact:   HSNews@pitt.edu As antimicrobial resistance continues to rise worldwide, bacteriophage therapy is increasingly being viewed as one of the most promising alternatives to conventional antibiotics. While numerous compassionate-use cases and early clinical studies have demonstrated the potential of phages to treat multidrug-resistant infections, the field still faces significant scientific and regulatory challenges. A major obstacle has been the lack of standardized tools capable of predicting how phages behave in the human body, how they should be formulated, and how therapeutic cocktails can be optimized for clinical use. ©  www.medschool.pitt.edu To address these challenges, the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) has established the first coordinated national research network dedicated specifically to advancing phage therapeutics. Through its new Centers for Accelerating Phage Therapy to Combat ESKAPE Pathogens program, known as ...

Single Nucleotide Variants Drive an Evolutionary Arms Race Between Phages and Carbon-Fixing Microbial Communities

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Microbial ecosystems responsible for converting carbon dioxide into methane are attracting growing attention as sustainable technologies for carbon recycling and renewable energy production. Yet despite their industrial importance, these complex communities remain vulnerable to biological forces that are often poorly understood. Among the most influential of these forces are bacteriophages, viruses that infect bacteria and can profoundly reshape microbial populations. A new study published in Nature Communications provides a detailed look at how phages and their hosts continuously adapt to one another within an anaerobic carbon dioxide-converting microbiome, revealing a dynamic evolutionary conflict driven by single-nucleotide genetic variation. The Phage Therapy  © The research followed a thermophilic biomethanation reactor over a period of 353 days. During this time, the system experienced an unexpected disturbance caused by a technical malfunction, creating a rare opportunity to...

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