Patent Description:
Bacteriophages have been known for many years having been discovered by Fredrick Twart in <NUM> and Felix d'Herelle in <NUM>. They are viruses with DNA or RNA genomes that infect and replicate within bacteria. Bacteriophages can undergo lytic or lysogenic cycles within bacteria. During the lytic cycle, the bacteriophage genetic material is injected into a bacterium, where transcription, translation and replication take place, leading to the assembly and packaging of bacteriophage proteins and nucleic acids and eventually to lysis where many bacteriophage are released, ready to infect further bacteria. Some bacteriophages can also carry out a lysogenic cycle in which the bacteriophage genetic material is incorporated into a bacterial genome.

Bacteriophages are currently being tested in clinical studies for the treatment of bacterial infections. Pathogens such as S. coli and P. aeruginosa are being targeted. <NPL>, describes a controlled clinical trail of a therapeutic bacteriophage preparation for the treatment of chronic otitis due to antibiotic-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa. <NPL>describes the administration of an oral T4-like phage cocktail to healthy adult volunteers from Bangladesh (ClinicalTrials. govidentifier: NCT01818206).

Engineered bacteriophages have been developed for multiple bacterial targets with the objective of elimination or reduction of bacterial load. Examples include; <NPL>, <NPL>; <NPL>, <NPL>. Further bacteriophages are disclosed in <CIT>, <CIT>, <CIT>, <CIT> and <CIT>.

Moreover, engineered bacteriophage have also been developed as vaccines or for targeted delivery to kill cancer cells. However, such bacteriophages are not intended to infect bacteria (<NPL>. ,<NPL>, <NPL>).

With the growth of antibiotic resistance, it is important that further strategies are developed to treat or prevent bacterial infection. The present invention represents an advance in the use of recombinant bacteriophages. The recombinant bacteriophages of the invention not only target a bacterium for killing using the lytic machinery of the bacteriophage or other heterologous molecules to kill the bacteria, but also express an antigen. The antigen is overexpressed during the period when bacteriophage genes are transcribed and translated and is released on lysis/death of the bacterium. The antigen is able to induce an immune response so that the bacteriophage is capable not only of killing the bacterium directly, but also of priming an immune response so that the bacteria can be eliminated by the immune system to eliminate residual bacteria or prevent relapse/re-infection at later time point. Hence the bacteriophage of the invention can both kill bacteria and prime the immune response to further eliminate the bacteria.

Accordingly, there is provided, a recombinant bacteriophage comprising a phage genome polynucleotide including a gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein wherein the heterologous antigen protein is a bacterial protein originating from a Gram positive or Gram negative bacterium, which is a staphylococcal, streptococcal, Pseudomonas, Propionibacterium, Aceinetobacter or meningoccal protein or a protein from P. aeruginosa, C. difficile, P. acnes, or N. gonorrhoea, wherein the heterologous antigen protein is naturally present in a bacterium that is infectable by the recombinant bacteriophage, wherein the heterologous protein is expressed at a higher level after infection with the recombinant bacteriophage and is capable of generating an immune response against the bacterial host and a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing the host bacterium wherein the heterologous antigen protein , after expression is released into the cytoplasm of the bacterium infected by the bacteriophage due to the absence of a leader sequence from the heterologous protein antigen.

In a second aspect of the invention, there is provided, a recombinant bacteriophage genome polynucleotide comprising a heterologous antigen gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein wherein the heterologous antigen protein is a bacterial protein originating from a Gram positive or Gram negative bacterium, which is a staphylococcal, streptococcal, Pseudomonas, Propionibacterium, Acinetobacter or meningoccal protein or a protein from P. aeruginosa, C. difficile, P. acnes, or N. gonorrhoeae, wherein the heterologous antigen protein is naturally present in a bacterium that is infectable by the recombinant bacteriophage, wherein the heterologous protein is expressed at a higher level after infection with the recombinant bacteriophage and is capable of generating an immune response against the bacterial host and a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing the host bacterium wherein the heterologous antigen protein, after expression is released into the cytoplasm of the bacterium infected by the bacteriophage due to the absence of a leader sequence from the heterologous protein antigen.

The present invention discloses a recombinant bacteriophage comprising a phage genome polynucleotide including a gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein wherein the heterologous antigen protein is a bacterial protein originating from a Gram positive or Gram negative bacterium, which is a staphylococcal, streptococcal, Pseudomonas, Propionibacterium, Acinetobacter or meningoccal protein or a protein from P. aeruginosa, C. difficile, P. acnes, or N. gonorrhoeae, wherein the heterologous antigen protein is naturally present in a bacterium that is infectable by the recombinant bacteriophage, wherein the heterologous protein is expressed at a higher level after infection with the recombinant bacteriophage and is capable of generating an immune response against the bacterial host and a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing the host bacterium wherein the heterologous antigen protein , after expression is released into the cytoplasm of the bacterium infected by the bacteriophage due to the absence of a leader sequence from the heterologous protein antigen The heterologous antigen protein is not expressed as part of a phage coat/capsid protein. The recombinant bacteriophage typically comprises a viral head made up of capsid protein(s) and comprising a recombinant phage genome polynucleotide, a tail structure containing means to bind to a bacterial host cell and means to insert the recombinant phage genome polynucleotide into a host cell. The genome polynucleotide is engineered to retain sequences essential for transcription and translation of the bacteriophage genome, as well as at least the packaging signal, however other parts of the bateriophage genome may be replaced with one or more genes encoding a heterologous antigen. It is preferred that the bacteriophage genome does not contain genes encoding proteins which allow the lysogenic cycle to proceed. It is also preferred that the bacteriophage genome of the invention does not contain all the genes that allow replication and release of viable bacteriophage. Therefore genes that encode proteins involved with the initiation of the lysogenic cycle or that encode some of the structural proteins of the bacteriophage may be deleted and/or may be replaced with genes encoding at least one antigen. Optionally, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a receptor for a host bacterium. This is typically a protein from the tail of the bacteriophage which binds specifically to a host bacterium, allowing the bacteriophage to bind to the host bacterium and insert genome polynucleotide into the host bacterium.

By "heterologous antigen" it is meant that the heterologous antigen is an antigen that is not present in the wild-type bacteriophage. According to the invention, the antigen is naturally present in the bacteria that the bacteriophage is designed to infect.

By "heterologous pathogen" it is meant a pathogen which is not a bacteriophage.

The term "host bacterium" refers to a bacterium which the recombinant bacteriophage binds to and is able to insert genome polynucleotide into.

The recombinant bacteriophage of the invention, encodes a heterologous antigen protein which is capable of generating an immune response against the bacterial host. According to the invention, the recombinant bacteriophage targets the same species of bacteria by firstly entering and lysing the bacterium and also causing an antigen from the bacterium to be expressed and presented to a host's immune system such that the immune system targets and kills further bacteria of the same variety which were not initially infected by the bacteriophage. Thus the "kill and prime" concept allows more efficient bacteriophage treatment of a targeted bacterium.

In an aspect of the disclosure, a recombinant bacteriophage comprises a phage genome polynucleotide including a gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein(s) and a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing a host bacterium. Thus the recombinant bacteriophage genome encodes proteins which are capable of priming an immune response and killing the host bacterium. The killing gene is optionally a bacteriophage gene encoding a protein that is capable of lysing a bacterium. The killing gene is optionally a heterologous gene with bacteriocidal activity. Examples of such genes are the CR!SPR-Cas nucleases and SASP genes which encode peptides that bind to and inactivate bacterial DNA (<CIT>, <CIT>, <CIT>, <CIT>, <CIT>, <NPL>, <NPL>, <NPL>, <NPL>, <NPL>. Further examples of killing genes include those disclosed in <NPL>; <NPL>, <NPL>;<NPL>, <NPL>.

The choice of promoters to drive expression of the heterologous antigen protein is important since sufficient antigen should be produced before the host bacterium is killed. Therefore in an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage of the invention uses a strong promoter or an early promoter to drive expression from the gene encoding the heterologous antigen protein. Optionally, expression of the heterologous antigen protein is driven by a strong, early promoter. Alternatively, expression of the heterologous antigen protein is driven by a strong late promoter. In an embodiment, multiple copies of the gene encoding the heterologous antigen protein are present in the recombinant bacteriophage so that expression is increased. For example, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM> or <NUM> copies of the gene encoding the heterologous antigen protein are present in the recombinant bacteriophage genome.

The recombinant bacteriophage of the invention contains a phage genome polynucleotide which comprises a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing a host bacterium. In an embodiment the killing gene is under the control of a late or a weak promoter. This has the advantage of ensuring that the host bacterium expresses sufficient antigen to prime an immune response before it is killed. In an embodiment, the killing gene is under the control of a promoter which is a late promoter and a weak promoter. In an embodiment, the heterologous antigen protein is driven by a strong and/or early promoter and the killing gene is under the control of a late and weak promoter.

In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage is selected from the group of families consisting of; myoviridae, siphoviridae, podoviridae, corticiviridae, tectiviridae, leviviridae, cystoviridae, inoviridae, lipothrixviridae, rudiviridae, plasmaviridae and fuselloviridae. In an embodiment the bacteriophage is a myoviridae or a siphoviridae. In an embodiment, the bacteriophage is a siphoviridae.

The heterologous antigen protein is a bacterial protein originating from a Gram positive or Gram negative bacterium. The heterologous antigen protein is naturally present in a bacterium that is infectable by the recombinant bacteriophage (i.e. the host bacterium). The heterologous protein is expressed at a higher level after infection with the recombinant bacteriophage. In this way an immune response can be primed against a protein in the bacterial host such that priming and killing target the same bacterium. This approach may be applicable where the heterologous antigen protein is usually expressed at a low level within the host bacterium.

The heterologous antigen protein is a staphylococcal, streptococcal, Pseudomonas, Propionibacterium, Acinetobacter or meningococcal protein or a protein from P. aeruginosa, C. difficile, P. acnes, or N. gonorrhoeae.

The heterologous antigen protein, after expression is released into the cytoplasm of a bacterium infected by the bacteriophage. This may be achieved by the absence of an appropriate leader sequence from the heterologous protein antigen. The heterologous antigen protein is expressed in the host bacterium and is initially present in the cytoplasm. As the host bacterium is lysed, the heterologous antigen protein is released from the bacterium and is able to interact with the immune system so that an immune response is elicited against the heterologous antigen protein. This may occur on death of the bacterium.

In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage of the invention comprises a phage genome polynucleotide including at least <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM> or <NUM> genes encoding at least <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM> or <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins. In an embodiment each of the genes encodes a different heterologous antigen protein. In an embodiment, the genes encode multiple copies of the same heterologous antigen protein. For example <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM> or <NUM> genes encode copies of the same heterologous antigen protein. Alternatively <NUM> genes encode <NUM> different heterologous antigen proteins, <NUM> genes encode <NUM> different heterologous antigen proteins, <NUM> genes encode <NUM> different heterologous antigen proteins, <NUM> genes encod <NUM> different heterologous antigen proteins etc..

In an embodiment, multiple proteins from the same organism are encoded by the phage genome polynucleotide. In an embodiment, each heterologous antigen protein is from a separate organism so that an immune response against multiple organisms (<NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM> or <NUM> bacterial species or a mixture of bacterial, viral and/or fungal species)is elicited. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen protein, normally found in a single organism. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in a single organism. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in a single organism. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in a single organism. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in a single organism. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in a two different organisms. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in a two different organisms. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in two different organisms. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in two different organisms. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in a three different organisms. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in three different organisms. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage comprises a genome encoding at least <NUM> heterologous antigen proteins, normally found in three different organisms.

In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage is incapable of carrying out the lysogenic cycle. This may be achieved by deleting portions of the phage genome polynucleotide that encode enzymes required for the lysogenic cycle, for example genes encoding recombinases. Such portions of polynucleotide are optionally replaced by a gene encoding a heterologous protein. In an embodiment, such portions of polynucleotide are replaced by a gene encoding a killing gene, for example a SASP gene or a CRISPR-Cas nuclease (<NPL>), <CIT>, <CIT>, <CIT>, <CIT> , <CIT>).

The recombinant bacteriophage is capable of entering a pathogenic bacterium such as staphylococcal, streptococcal, Pseudomonas, Propionibacterium, Acinetobacter , P. aeruginosa, C. difficile, P. meningitidis, or N. gonorrhoeae bacterium. The recombinant bacteriophage contains a phage genome polynucleotide which optionally comprises a gene encoding a protein which specifically binds to one of the above mentioned bacteria. Such genes are optionally retained in the phage genome polynucleotide. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage is adapted to enter a S. aureus bacterium.

In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage is adapted to degrade biofilm. In an embodiment this is achieved by engineering the phage to express biofilm disruptive enzymes. In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage genome polynucleotide contains a gene encoding dispersin B (DspB) (<NPL>), a gene encoding a depolymerase carried on the surface of phage which degrades bacterial capsular polysaccharides (<NPL>)).

In an embodiment, the heterologous gene encodes a staphylococcal protein selected from the group consisting of SitC/MntC/saliva binding protein, EbhA, EbhB, Elastin binding protein (EbpS), EFB (FIB), SBI, ClfA, SdrC, SdrG, SdrH, Lipase GehD, SasA, FnbA, FnbB, Cna, ClfB, FbpA, Npase, IsaA/PisA, SsaA, EPB, SSP-<NUM>, SSP-<NUM>, HBP, Vitronectin binding protein, fibrinogen binding protein, coagulase, Fig and MAP, IsdA, IsdB, HarA, MntC, alpha toxin (Hla), detoxified alpha toxin point mutation, optionally with a point mutation at H35, RNA III activating protein (RAP), protein A, a variant of protein A. In an embodiment, the heterologous gene encodes a protein described in <CIT>.

The recombinant bacteriophage is as described in the claims and comprises genes encoding a heterologous antigen protein. When the recombinant bacteriophage enters a bacterial host cell, expression of the heterologous antigen protein is driven by an appropriate promoter allowing the heterologous antigen protein to be released from the bacterial host cell, allowing the immune system of a mammalian host to generate an immune response against the heterologous antigen protein. The immune response may generate antibodies against the heterologous antigen protein (humoral response) or may generate a T-cell mediate immune response (cellular response) or the immune response may be a mix of humoral and cellular components.

In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage is as described in the claims and comprises a phage genome polynucleotide including a gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein which is under the control of a strong promoter and a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing a host bacterium under the control of a weak and/or late promoter, optionally wherein the phage genome polynucleotide is engineered such that the gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein replaces a phage gene encoding a structural protein and the killing gene replaces a gene involved in the lysogenic cycle. This allows the recombinant bacteriophage to be incapable of producing viable progeny phage and incapable of carrying out a lysogenic cycle. However, the recombinant bacteriophage is capable of generating a heterologous antigen protein in a quantity sufficient to prime an immune response and to kill the bacterial host through the production of a protein capable of killing the host bacterium.

In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage is as described in the claims and comprises a phage genome polynucleotide including a gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein which is under the control of a strong promoter and a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing a host bacterium under the control of a weak and/or late promoter, optionally wherein the phage genome polynucleotide is engineered such that the gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein replaces a phage gene encoding a structural protein and the killing gene replaces a gene involved in the lysogenic cycle. This allows the recombinant bacteriophage to be incapable of producing viable progeny phage and incapable of carrying out a lysogenic cycle. However, the recombinant bacteriophage is capable of generating a heterologous antigen protein in a quantity sufficient to prime an immune response and to kill the bacterial host through the production of a protein capable of killing the host bacterium. In addition the recombinant bacteriophage is adapted to bind to a host bacterium through containing a modified component (for example a tail fibre or plate) which is engineered to bind to the required host bacterium with higher affinity than the equivalent component of a wild type bacteriophage.

In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage is as described in the claims and comprises a phage genome polynucleotide including a gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein which is under the control of a strong promoter and a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing a host bacterium under the control of a weak and/or late promoter, optionally wherein the phage genome polynucleotide is engineered such that the gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein replaces a phage gene encoding a structural protein and the killing gene replaces a gene involved in the lysogenic cycle. This allows the recombinant bacteriophage to be incapable of producing viable progeny phage and incapable of carrying out a lysogenic cycle. However, the recombinant bacteriophage is capable of generating a heterologous antigen protein in a quantity sufficient to prime an immune response and to kill the bacterial host through the production of a protein capable of killing the host bacterium. In addition the recombinant bacteriophage is adapted to degrade biofilm (for example by containing a gene under the control of a promoter that expresses biofilm disruptive enzymes) and is adapted to bind to a host bacterium through containing a modified component (for example a tail fibre or plate) which is engineered to bind to the required host bacterium with higher affinity than the equivalent component of a wild type bacteriophage.

A further aspect of the invention is a recombinant bacteriophage genome polynucleotide comprising a heterologous antigen gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein wherein the heterologous antigen protein is a bacterial protein originating from a Gram positive or Gram negative bacterium, which is a staphylococcal, streptococcal, Pseudomonas, Propionibacterium, Acinetobacter or meningoccal protein or a protein from P. aeruginosa, C. difficile, P. acnes, or N. gonorrhoeae, wherein the heterologous antigen protein is naturally present in a bacterium that is infectable by the recombinant bacteriophage, wherein the heterologous protein is expressed at a higher level after infection with the recombinant bacteriophage and is capable of generating an immune response against the bacterial host, and a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing the host bacterium wherein the heterologous antigen protein, after expression is released into the cytoplasm of the bacterium infected by the bacteriophage due to the absence of a leader sequence from the heterologous protein antigen which is optionally contained within the bacteriophage of the invention or is freestanding. The invention encompasses the recombinant bacteriophage genome polynucleotide associated with any of the recombinant bacteriophage described above.

In an embodiment, the recombinant bacteriophage genome polynucleotide retains a sequence associated with the packaging of the genome into a phage capsid and retains genes associated with transcription and/or replication of the bacteriophage genome but does not retain all the genes required for making all structural elements of a complete bacteriophage. Some genes encoding structural proteins of a bacteriophage are optionally replaced with genes encoding one or more heterologous antigens, as described above. In an embodiment, at least one gene encoding a structural protein of the bacteriophage is/are replaced by at least one gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing a host bacterium. In an embodiment at least one gene encoding a structural protein of the bacteriophage is/are replaced by at least one gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein and at least one gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing a host bacterium.

In an embodiment, the at least one gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein is under the control of a strong promoter and/or an early promoter. In an embodiment, the at least one gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing the host bacterium is under the control of a weak promoter or a late promoter.

A further embodiment of the disclosure is a pharmaceutical composition comprising the recombinant bacteriophage or the recombinant bacteriophage genome polynucleotide described above. In an embodiment, the pharmaceutical composition further comprises a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, for example excipients to allow administration as a topical cream or ointment.

A further aspect of the disclosure is a vaccine comprising the recombinant bacteriophage or the recombinant bacteriophage genome polynucleotide of the invention.

A further aspect of the disclosure is medical uses for the recombinant bacteriophage of the invention. Accordingly, there is provided a recombinant bacteriophage comprising a phage genome polynucleotide including a gene encoding a heterologous protein for use in the prophylactic prevention of bacterial infectious disease. The infectious disease optionally comprises a bacterial infection, for example a Staphylococcus aureus infection.

The primary use of the recombinant bacteriophage of the invention is for the treatment and/or prevention of bacterial disease, particularly infectious disease involving bacterial infection or disease involving bacterial and viral or bacterial and fungal components. The recombinant bacteriophage of the invention expresses at least one heterologous antigen at a level sufficient for an immune response to be elicited against the heterologous antigen. The recombinant bacteriophage also expresses a killing gene so that the bacterial host is killed following the expression of the antigen. In this way, a infection is treated by killing a bacterial component of the infection and an immune response is primed.

In order that this invention may be better understood, the following examples are set forth. These examples are for purposes of illustration only, and are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.

To effectively produce the engineered bacteriophage the bacteriophage genome is inserted into a yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) or bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) backbone that includes components for selection and replication in yeast or bacteria, respectively.

Alternatively, the phage genome can be engineered directly within the bacteria by using a recombineering competent bacteria (<FIG>). For example as described in<NPL>.

There are many possibilities for the genetic engineering of phage are shown in <FIG> Portions of the bacteriophage genome can be deleted to obtain a minimum synthetic bacteriophage genome which retains the the sequences essential for transcription and translation and the packaging signal. Other gene including those enoding proteins involved in the lysogenic cycle and capsid proteins can be deleted and replaced with selected genes. The four possibilities disclosed in <FIG> include i) the killer gene (under the control of a weak or late promoter) which encodes a protein capable of killing the selected host cell, ii) at least one heterologous antigen gene, under the control of a strong or early promoter to allow high enough levels of expression before the host bacterium is killed, iii) a modified tail fibre/plate to allow the bacteriophage to infect the required range of bacterial host cells and iv) optionally a gene encoding a biofilm destroping enzyme. The selective removal and replacement of genes allows the bacteriophage genome to retain approximately the same size.

The engineered bacteriophage is based on a minimum phage genome that includes essential phage genome components such as origin of replication (ori), packaging signal(s) and phage tail recognition components in addition to several heterologous components. The first of these components is at least one gene that encodes a vaccine antigen driven by a early or strong promoter. The second component is a gene encoding a killer molecule, whose expression is driven by a late or weak promoter. A third optional component is at least one gene encoding a depolymerase which is capable of destroying biofilms, whose expression is driven by a late promoter. The engineered bacteriophage is missing some essential genes so will not be able to initiate a full lytic or lysogenic cycle when used in the treatment of a mammalian subject. However, it will be able to replicate in E. coli or other non-pathogenic bacterial cells which contain to bacteriophage capsid assembly machinery, as shown in <FIG>. For example a BAC construct includes both the engineered bacteriophage components and the bacteria specific components (see <FIG> ).

The engineered bacteriophage is produced in either E coli. or a non-pathogenic strain of the bacterial target that expresses the bacteriophage capsid machinery under an inducible or a constitutive promoter.

The bacterial host cell is transfected with a bacterial artificial genome (BAC) construct or appropriate artificial engineered bacteriophage genome. As the bacterial host cell expresses the capsid machinery in trans , the bacterial host cell is capable of producing phage in which the genome of the engineered bacteriophage is packaged into complete bacteriophage. The transfected bacterial host cell is cultured in a suitable medium, allowing phage replication to proceed in the bacterial host cells. The phage growth can be monitored using culture turbidity, pO2, pH, or may be allowed to continue for a predetermined length of incubation time. Based on known phage life cycle parameters. Infected cells, concentrated by centrifugation, may be treated with organic solvents (e.g. chloroform), EDTA, lysozyme or bacteriophage lysins to induce lysis and release the phage.

After lysis, remaining cells or larger cell debris are removed by low-speed centrifugation and the phage containing supernatant is retained. The phage can then be purified by precipitation with polyethylene glycol (PEG) followed by removal of PEG by dialysis (Yamamoto et al (<NUM>) <NUM>; <NUM>-<NUM>) or by passing through a <NUM> filter to remove cell debris and then using tangential flow filtration against a <NUM>00kDa membrane which retains phage but allows passage of media components and some cellular proteins. This step is followed by scalable chromatography that can yield a recovery rate of up to <NUM>% (Yamamoto et al (<NUM>) <NUM>; <NUM>-<NUM>). Hydroxyapatite chromatography of phage display virions is described in<NPL>. T4 bacteriophage can be purified by using strong anion exchange monolithic chromatography columns (<NPL>).

The overall goal of the therapeutic treatment with engineered bacteriophage is to treat acute or chronic bacterial disease and prevent disease relapse long term via persistent immunity.

Both in vitro & in vivo experiments are done to demonstrate that the bacteriophage prime and kill concept is capable of killing the host bacteria bacteria whilst allowing sufficient vaccine antigen to be produced to lead to the priming of an immune response against the chosen antigen. For in vitro demonstration the engineered bacteriophage will infect the bacteria. The vaccine antigen is expressed under the control of a strong promoter so that sufficient antigen is produced before the host cell is killed. The antigen may be either secreted whilst the host bacterium is alive or released from the bacterial cytoplasm after the bacterium is killed. A killer molecule is expressed under the control of a late promoter so that the killer molecule is not expressed until sizeable amounts of the priming antigen have been expressed. When a sufficient level of the killer molecule has been expressed, this will kill the bacteria. These experiments therefore aim to demonstrate both killing efficacy and the potential to induce durable immunity.

An in vivo preclinical model using a bacteria as a pathogen is used to demonstrate the 'Prime & Kill " concept. Animals are infected with the bacterial pathogen in an established infection model. The animals are subsequently treated with the engineered bacteriophage. Blood sample are taken from the animals after <NUM>-<NUM> days so that immune responses against the vaccine antigen can be assessed and The ability of the bacteriophage to kill the bacterial pathogen is demonstrated by assessing the number of CFUs of the bacterium isolatable from animals treated with bacteriophage compared to a control group treated with excipient. The induction of a protective immune response directed to the vaccine antigen is monitored by a suitable assay such as an ELISA on serum taken from the animal.

Subsequent experiments demonstrate protection against the recurrence of disease caused by the same bacteria. In these experiments animals are infected with the bacterial pathogen and subsequently with the engineered bacteriophage. An intial cycle of Prime & Kill takes place in which the bacteriophage infected bacteria prime an immune response and are subsequently killed by the killer molecule expressed by the recombinant bacteriophage. The initial cycle of Prime & Kill allows the animals to survive the initial infection with the bacterial pathogen and become primed. At a later time point, the primed animals are challenged with the pathogen against which they have been primed. The survival, recovery and pathogen load of the primed animals will be compared to that of a control group of animals.

To enhance the capacity of bacteriophage concept efficacy we also consider the option of including biofilm degrading depolymerase in the engineered bacteriophage construct. The challenge experiments described above are repeated using either a bacteriophage engineered to express a vaccine antigen and a killer molecule or a bacteriophage engineered to express a vaccine antigen, a killer molecule and a depolymerase, capable of degrading biofilm. The ability of the depolymerase to enhance the efficacy of the engineered bacteriophage is demonstrated.

Both in vitro & in vivo experiments are done to demonstrate that engineered bacteriophage infect bacteria, express the vaccine antigen and then kill the bacteria. Two different preclinical challenge models are used to demonstrate the capacity of the engineered bacteriophage to kill the pathogen, induce an immune response & protect against recurrent infection.

Staphylococcus aureus is used as the the model pathogen to demonstrate the concept. The Staphylococcus aureus alpha toxin vaccine antigen is selected for the preclinical proof of concept.

A bacteriophage genome is engineered in a BAC (or appropriate artificial engineered bacteriophage genome) such that it contains a tagged, detoxified α-toxoid from S. aureus under the control of a strong early promoter, as the vaccine antigen and the usual lytic machinery of the bacteriophage under a late promoter as the killer molecule. Other components of the bacteriophage genome are deleted so that the bacterphage genome would not produce viable bacteriophage without the help of a host cell that contains bacteriophage capsid machinery. The BAC is transfected into E. coli that expresses the bacteriophage capsid machinery under an inducible or a constitutive promoter and cultured so that bacteriophage are produced. These are harvested and purified as described above.

The purified engineered bacteriophage are assessed in vitro for their ability to kill (S. aureus) a heterologous host bacterium which the bacteriophage is engineered to infect. In a second in vitro assay, the expression of a tagged alpha toxoid in host bacteria (S. aureus) infected by the engineered bacteriophage is assessed by Western blot using antibodies specific for the tagged alpha toxoid.

Claim 1:
A recombinant bacteriophage comprising a phage genome polynucleotide including a gene encoding a heterologous antigen protein wherein the heterologous antigen protein is a bacterial protein originating from a Gram positive or Gram negative bacterium which is a staphylococcal, streptococcal, Pseudomonas, Propionibacterium, Acinetobacter or meningococcal protein or a protein from P. aeruginosa, C. difficile, P.acnes, or N. gonorrhoeae, wherein the heterologous antigen protein is naturally present in a bacterium that is infectable by the recombinant bacteriophage, wherein the heterologous protein is expressed at a higher level after infection with the recombinant bacteriophage and is capable of generating an immune response against the bacterial host, and a killing gene encoding a protein that is capable of killing the host bacterium wherein the heterologous antigen protein , after expression is released into the cytoplasm of the bacterium infected by the bacteriophage due to the absence of a leader sequence from the heterologous protein antigen.