A Pseudomonas Lysogenic Bacteriophage Crossing the Antarctic and Arctic, Representing a New Genus of Autographiviridae

Polar regions tend to support simple food webs, which are vulnerable to phage-induced gene transfer or microbial death. To further investigate phage-host interactions in polar regions and the potential linkage of phage communities between the two poles, we induced the release of a lysogenic phage, v...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of molecular sciences 2023-04, Vol.24 (8), p.7662
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Zhenyu, Jiang, Wenhui, Kim, Cholsong, Peng, Xiaoya, Fan, Cong, Wu, Yingliang, Xie, Zhixiong, Peng, Fang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Polar regions tend to support simple food webs, which are vulnerable to phage-induced gene transfer or microbial death. To further investigate phage-host interactions in polar regions and the potential linkage of phage communities between the two poles, we induced the release of a lysogenic phage, vB_PaeM-G11, from sp. D3 isolated from the Antarctic, which formed clear phage plaques on the lawn of sp. G11 isolated from the Arctic. From permafrost metagenomic data of the Arctic tundra, we found the genome with high-similarity to that of vB_PaeM-G11, demonstrating that vB_PaeM-G11 may have a distribution in both the Antarctic and Arctic. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that vB_PaeM-G11 is homologous to five uncultured viruses, and that they may represent a new genus in the family, named here. vB_PaeM-G11 was stable in a temperature range (4-40 °C) and pH (4-11), with latent and rise periods of about 40 and 10 min, respectively. This study is the first isolation and characterization study of a phage distributed in both the Antarctic and Arctic, identifying its lysogenic host and lysis host, and thus provides essential information for further understanding the interaction between polar phages and their hosts and the ecological functions of phages in polar regions.
ISSN:1422-0067
1661-6596
1422-0067
DOI:10.3390/ijms24087662