logo
episode-header-image
Jul 2022
32m 28s

Are viruses the key to fighting infectio...

Bbc World Service
About this episode

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 BBC World Service

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

Up next
Yesterday
Why do I find silence unbearable?
Is silence blood-curdling or blissful? CrowdScience listener Ziqi finds it intolerable and thinks that there’s a good reason for it – silence is so rare in nature that it could be a signal for danger. Presenter Marnie Chesterton is on a mission to test Ziqi’s theory, starting wit ... Show More
26m 27s
Jan 9
How do cicadas know what season it is?
Crowdscience listener Ryosuke grew up in Japan, and spent his childhood summers catching cicadas in the park. For people in Japan, the sound of their chirping signals the first true summer day. But until they emerge, these enigmatic insects live underground - often for many years ... Show More
26m 29s
Jan 5
Did I inherit my laugh?
CrowdScience listener Limbikani in Zambia is always being told he has his Dad’s laugh, so he set us the challenge of trying to find out whether a laugh can be passed down in our genes or if it’s something we learn from our environment. Presenter Caroline Steel steps into the worl ... Show More
26m 28s
Recommended Episodes
Dec 2019
Qu'est-ce que la phagothérapie ?
La phagothérapie est une méthode de traitement des infections bactériennes, qui utilise des bactériophages. Sauf exception, elle n’est plus pratiquée en occident depuis des décennies. Mais face à l’antibiorésistance, de plus en plus de médecins et chercheurs y voient une solution ... Show More
4m 10s
Nov 2018
40 - Phage
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Bacteriophages -- viruses that target and kill bacteria -- were one of the most promising medical treatments of the early 20th century, and were used to treat all sorts of infections, from cholera to staph, and everything in between. But by the ... Show More
52m 59s
May 2020
Ep 50 Antibiotics: We owe it all to chemistry!
<p>Fifty episodes. That’s fifty (sometimes) deadly viruses, bacteria, protozoa, parasites, and poisons. And don’t forget the fifty quarantinis to accompany each! What better way to celebrate this momentous occasion than talking about something that may actually save you: antibiot ... Show More
1h 59m
Apr 2023
Covid – missing link found?
Data collated from swab samples taken in Wuhan’s market in the early days of the Covid pandemic suggest animals sold in the market were carrying the virus at the time. It’s the strongest evidence yet for an intermediate species – one which passed the virus on to humans after beco ... Show More
27m 58s
Jan 2023
Cancer cure, Strep A research and hopes for biodiversity
Base editing is a technique for substituting the building blocks of DNA. It has only been around for a few years, so its use to apparently cure cancer was all the more remarkable, as BBC Health Correspondent James Gallagher tells us.We take a trip down the river Wye with ecologis ... Show More
27m 46s
Jan 2024
176 - A New Way to Fight Super Bacteria
tail spinning
1h 5m