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OPINION article

Front. Microbiol.

Sec. Antimicrobials, Resistance and Chemotherapy

Commentary: CRISPR–Cas systems against carbapenem resistance — from proof‑of‑concept to clinical translation

Provisionally accepted
Vijayasimha,  MVijayasimha, M1*Srikanth  MulavagiliSrikanth Mulavagili2
  • 1Chandigarh University, Mohali, India
  • 2Pandit Bhagwat Dayal Sharma Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences, Rohtak, India

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

Terminology (used consistently throughout): "sequence-guided therapeutics" refers to interventions whose target selection, triage, and monitoring are anchored to pathogen sequence features (genes/variants) rather than phenotype alone; "programmability" refers to the capacity to retarget or update the intervention by sequence design; and "escape" denotes loss of effect via genetic or ecological routes (e.g., target mutation, receptor change, payload loss), with uncertainty that necessitates surveillance and iterative adaptation.Recent data show both progress in and challenges with the use of engineered bacteriophages as delivery vehicles containing antisense CRISPR-Cas systems to eliminate specific pathogenic bacteria in vivo [2]. This expands the potential for the use of these engineered phages for application in vivo, beyond just an in vitro test of feasibility. Furthermore, the ideas about being able to edit bacteria "in situ," i.e. directly, in their natural environment, appear as though they are a realistic possibility. However, advanced use of these technologies will require additional work to ensure the appropriate specificity, therapy delivery, and unintended environmental consequences are all monitored closely [3].The most interesting aspect of the carbapenem rescue initiative is that the use of bacteriophage capsid to deliver gene-specific inhibitor to the bacteria could lead to improved or "sparing" use of antibiotics instead of a direct bacteriolytic substitute [4]. The results presented here strengthen the overall conclusion of the previous review [1] while highlighting a continuing problem in the area of CRISPR technology: a lack of consistency in data reporting which creates difficulty in comparing different platforms for their effectiveness at preventing resistance and predicting clinical applicability. A clinical for CRISPRbased stewardship of AMR requires four basic elements that can be packaged together into a CRISPR-AMR stewardship bundle.To avoid overreach for this article type, we reiterate that the bundle below functions as a platform-agnostic but parameter-sensitive reporting heuristic: it can be applied across diverse CRISPR modalities (e.g., Cas9 vs Cas13, nuclease vs base editing, replicative vs non-replicative vectors, and different delivery vehicles), while allowing the reported parameters to be tailored to each modality and infection niche. The cited studies are used illustratively to motivate these reporting minima, not as a definitive evidence synthesis or endorsement of any single platform.1. Indication triage + minimal diagnostics CRISPR anti-AMR programs should predefine a minimal diagnostic set: which gene(s)/variant families qualify a case, what turnaround time is required, and what to do in mixed infections. Without explicit minimal diagnostics, CRISPR risks becoming a therapy only for high-resource sequencing centers-undermining global relevance. 2. Delivery accountability (dose-at-site logic) Because efficacy depends on payload delivery to the infection niche, manuscripts should standardize reporting of: (i) delivered dose, (ii) site-of-infection exposure, (iii) persistence, and (iv) microbiome perturbation. Preclinical demonstrations are increasingly sophisticated [2], but translational comparability demands consistent "dose-at-site" reporting rather than platform-specific proxies. 3. Escape forecasting + response plan CRISPR platforms must treat escape as predictable biology, not an afterthought. A minimal plan should include: expected escape mechanisms, monitoring windows, thresholds for action, and a programmable "second-line" response (e.g., multiplex targeting, spacer cycling, or combined adjuvant strategies). The delivery-yield constraints and spacer dependence observed in gene-reversal work are precisely the kind of variables that should be operationalized into monitoring standards [4]. We temper the framing here: escape mechanisms are often predictable in class (the "how"), but not reliably predictable in frequency, timing, or dominance in vivo (the "how much/when"), which are context-dependent. Accordingly, the bundle emphasizes prospective surveillance, prespecified action thresholds, and an adaptive response plan rather than forecast accuracy or certainty. The concept of programmability will not have any real-world value, on a worldwide basis, until manufacturing processes, cold chain delivery systems, and diagnostic testing methodologies can be brought out of the specialty facility realm into the general population. In conjunction with this, design choices made to minimize the potential ecological impact and maximize the potential for successful deployment of programming technologies (e.g., nonreplicative development and appropriate controls placed on the behaviour of the genetic cargo), should be clearly communicated as a necessary component of the translation process, rather than just as optional ethical commentary [3,5]. The target panels that have been established should also represent regional carbapenemase epidemiology, rather than simply reflecting the priorities of one geographic location. Equity-by-design is therefore treated as an early design constraint rather than an immediate equity outcome: the manuscript argues for pre-specifying accessrelevant requirements (diagnostic turnaround, cold-chain tolerance, manufacturing complexity/cost, and fit for decentralised care) early enough to shape platform development, without claiming that any single design choice guarantees equitable deployment. Practical pathways include modular diagnostic packages (from rapid gene panels to sequencing where available), tiered manufacturing and distribution strategies (including temperature-stable formulations where feasible), and transparent reporting of logistics that determine deployability in low-resource settings.Likewise, the call for region-specific carbapenemase target panels should be interpreted as modular customization within a shared global framework (swappable, locally validated modules), not bespoke redesign of the entire platform; this approach supports global interoperability while respecting regional epidemiology and supply-chain realities. In Tsolakidou's overview, CRISPR-Cas has been identified as a potential solution for "postantibiotic anxiety," and an innovative option for creating personalized medicines [1]. The next logical step in this area is to implement this new technology by aligning the goals of innovative science (Scientific Purpose) with the implementation (Clinical Application) of that science (i.e. How and Why we will use it). By establishing the minimum expectations for all of these four areas, including: a minimum standard of care for diagnostics, delivery & compliance, post-market surveillance, and equitable access to these treatments (Equity by Design) as one set of criteria (Stewardship Bundle), establishing those criteria as minimum standard expectations for research publications would allow for rapid translation of clinical research into clinical practice while also providing researchers with comparable results across multiple institutions globally For clarity of translation, each bundle element answers a practical "why it matters" question: (i) indication triage protects clinical appropriateness and turnaround; (ii) dose-at-site logic protects reproducibility across delivery platforms; (iii) escape surveillance protects durability and safety; and (iv) equityby-design protects deployability beyond high-resource centres. This signposting keeps the piece within the scope of a commentary while making the implementation logic explicit.

Keywords: CRISPR-based antimicrobial resistance stewardship, Equity-by-design frameworks, Evolutionary escape surveillance, Sequence-guided therapeutics, Translational AMR governance

Received: 22 Dec 2025; Accepted: 21 Jan 2026.

Copyright: © 2026 M and Mulavagili. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence: Vijayasimha, M

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