Project overview
Our long term objective is to invent a new type of medicine which consists of living bacteria which would be given as nose drops (akin to the Yacult drink that is commercially available and taken by mouth by people with bowel problems). We have recently published work in which we inoculated a small dose of a `friendly bacterium` - Neisseria lactamica - into the noses of participants and found that the bacterium was still present in their throats 6 months later, and caused no ill effects. Furthermore, the friendly bacterium stopped the paticipants from being infected with a related bacterium which can cause meningitis. This concept of `bacteriotherapy` is rapidly gaining credence as a way to treat bacterial infections - for example we now treat Clostridium difficile diarrhoea with bacteria derived from the stools of donors, and it works very well. We have discovered a way to genetically transform Neisseria lactamica with genes from a very wide range of living things, which means that we could potentially develop a range of bacterial medicines containing genes which exert specific desired effects in the recipients. For example, we could make a bacterial medicine which makes substances which kill harmful bacteria or viruses or which simply out-competes them. One of the problems with our idea is that when we inoculated students with the Neisseria lactamica, we found that 65% of them became colonised, but this was only 35% if we restricted the study to non-smokers. This would not be a very reliable bacteriotherapy and we would need to increase the likelihood of colonisation if this approach is to be of any use. So, in the proposed study, we will use our technology to make a strain of Neisseria lactamica which makes two proteins that are normally used by other bacteria to stick to cells. We will use for this purpose two proteins that are normally made by the related meningitis bacterium Neisseria meningitidis, to stick to stick to the inner surface of the nose when it colonises humans. We will show that the new genetically modified strain has all of the characteristics we expect including the ability to stick better to cells in the laboratory, and that is safe to release into the community (because it is not more resistant to the immune system, or to antibiotics, and does not have increased capacity to gradually change into something more dangerous). We will then apply to the appropriate regulators for permission to repeat our studies with human volunteers to see if the genetically modified strain that we have generated manages to colonise better than the wild type bacterium from which it is derived. This would be the subject of a follow-on study - if that were to be successful this strategy that we have devised would be a future therapy of relevance to any disease process involving colonisation of the nasopharynx, eg pneumonia, Chronic Bronchitis, sinusitis, ear infection, meningitis or MRSA colonisation and disease.
Staff
Lead researchers
Other researchers
Research outputs
Adam P. Dale, Diane F. Gbesemete, Robert C. Read & Jay R. Laver,
2022
Type: bookChapter
Alasdair P S Munro, Leila Janani, Victoria Cornelius, Parvinder K Aley, Gavin Babbage, David Baxter, et al., Marcin Bula, Katrina Cathie, Krishna Chatterjee, Kate Dodd, Yvanne Enever, Karishma Gokani, Anna L Goodman, Christopher A Green, Linda Harndahl, John Haughney, Alexander Hicks, Agatha A van der Klaauw, Jonathan Kwok, Teresa Lambe, Vincenzo Libri, Martin J Llewelyn, Alastair C McGregor, Angela M Minassian, Patrick Moore, Mehmood Mughal, Yama F Mujadidi, Jennifer Murira, Orod Osanlou, Rostam Osanlou, Daniel R Owens, Mihaela Pacurar, Adrian Palfreeman, Daniel Pan, Tommy Rampling, Karen Regan, Stephen Saich, Jo Salkeld, Dinesh Saralaya, Sunil Sharma, Ray Sheridan, Ann Sturdy, Emma C Thomson, Shirley Todd, Chris Twelves, Robert C Read, Sue Charlton, Bassam Hallis, Mary Ramsay, Nick J. Andrews, Jonathan Nguyen-Van-Tam, Matthew D. Snape, Xinxue Liu & Saul N Faust,
2021, The Lancet, 398(10318), 2258-2276
Type: article
Paul Little, Nick A Francis, Beth Stuart, Gilly O'Reilly, Natalie Thompson, Taeko Becque, Alastair D Hay, Kay Wang, Michael Sharland, Anthony Harnden, Guiqing Yao, James Raftery, Shihua Zhu, Joseph Little, Charlotte Hookham, Kate Rowley, Joanne Euden, Kim Harman, Samuel Coenen, Robert C Read, Catherine Woods, Christopher C Butler, Saul N Faust, Geraldine Leydon, Mandy Wan, Kerenza Hood, Jane Whitehurst, Samantha Richards-Hall, Peter Smith, Michael Thomas, Michael Moore & Theo Verheij,
2021, The Lancet, 398(10309), 1417-1426
Type: article
Xinxue Liu, Robert H. Shaw, Arabella S.V. Stuart, Melanie Greenland, Parvinder K. Aley, Nick J. Andrews, J. Claire Cameron, Sue Charlton, Elizabeth A. Clutterbuck, Andrea M. Collins, Tanya Dinesh, Anna England, Saul N. Faust, Daniela M. Ferreira, Adam Finn, Christopher A. Green, Bassam Hallis, Paul T. Heath, Helen Hill, Teresa Lambe, Rajeka Lazarus, Vincenzo Libri, Fei Long, Yama F. Mujadidi, Emma L. Plested, Samuel Provstgaard-Morys, Maheshi N. Ramasamy, Mary Ramsay, Robert C. Read, Hannah Robinson, Nisha Singh, David P.J. Turner, Paul J. Turner, Laura L. Walker, Rachel White, Jonathan S. Nguyen-Van-Tam, Matthew D. Snape, Alasdair P.S. Munro, Jazz Bartholomew, Laura Presland, Sarah Horswill, Sarah Warren, Sophie Varkonyi-Clifford, Stephen Saich, Kirsty Adams, Marivic Ricamara, Nicola Turner, Nicole Y. Yee Ting, Sarah Whittley & Hannah Sainsbury,
2021, The Lancet, 398(10303), 856-869
Type: article
Jay R. Laver, Diane Gbesemete, Adam P. Dale, Zoe C. Pounce, Carl N. Webb, Eleanor F. Roche, Graham Berreen, Konstantinos Belogiannis, Alison R. Hill, Muktar M. Ibrahim, David W. Cleary, Anish K. Pandey, Holly E. Humphries, Lauren Allen, Hans de Graaf, Martin C. Maiden, Saul N. Faust, Andrew R. Gorringe & Robert C. Read,
2021, Science Translational Medicine, 13(601)
Type: article
Christine E Jones, Robert Read & Anastasia Theodosiou,
2020, Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases, 33(6), 548-555
Type: article
Tom Wilkinson, Rupert Dixon, Clive Page, Miles Carroll, Gareth Griffiths, Ling-Pei Ho, Anthony De Soyza, Timothy Felton, Keir E Lewis, Karen Phekoo, James D Chalmers, Anthony Gordon, Lorcan McGarvey, Jillian Doherty, Robert C Read, Manu Shankar-Hari, Nuria Martinez-Alier, Michael O'Kelly, Graeme Duncan, Roelize Walles, James Sykes, Charlotte Summers & Dave Singh,
2020, Trials, 21, 691
Type: article