Title: Complete Genome Sequence of the Microbacterium Bacteriophage Chako
ABSTRACT We characterized the complete genome sequence of Chako, an obligate lytic bacteriophage with siphovirus morphology from subcluster EA1 that infects Microbacterium foliorum NRRL B-24224. Its 41.6-kb genome contains 62 putative protein-coding genes and is highly similar to that of bacteriophage HanSolo (99.26% nucleotide identity). more »« less
Amabiko is a lytic subcluster BE2 bacteriophage that infects Streptomyces scabiei — a bacterium causing common scab in potatoes. Its 131,414 bp genome has a GC content of 49.5% and contains 245 putative protein-coding genes, 45 tRNAs, and one tmRNA. Amabiko is closely related to Streptomyces bacteriophage MindFlayer (gene content similarity: 86.5%).
Here, we characterized the complete genome of the Siphoviridae BiggityBass, a lytic subcluster DR bacteriophage infecting Gordonia terrae CAG3. Its 63.2-kb genome contains 84 protein-coding genes, of which 40 could be assigned a putative function. BiggityBass is related most closely to AnClar and Yago84 with 90.61% and 90.52% nucleotide identity, respectively.
Johnson, Genevieve; Stark, Nicole; Wolfe, Alan J.; Putonti, Catherine; Baltrus, David A.
(, Microbiology Resource Announcements)
ABSTRACT Recently, we isolated a temperate bacteriophage, Pseudomonas phage Dobby, from a calcium oxalate kidney stone. Here, we present the complete genome of the bacterial host harboring this phage, Pseudomonas aeruginosa UMB2738. From the analysis of the genome sequence, five additional prophage sequences were identified.
Holtappels, D; Abelson, S A; Nouth, S C; Rickus, G_E J; Amare, S Z; Giller, J P; Jian, D Z; Koskella, B
(, Microbiology Spectrum)
Zeng, Quan
(Ed.)
ABSTRACT ThePseudomonas syringaespecies complex is a heterogeneous group of plant pathogenic bacteria associated with a wide distribution of plant species. Advances in genomics are revealing the complex evolutionary history of this species complex and the wide array of genetic adaptations underpinning their diverse lifestyles. Here, we genomically characterize twoP. syringaeisolates collected from diseased Callery pears (Pyrus calleryana) in Berkeley, California in 2019 and 2022. We also isolated a lytic bacteriophage, which we characterized and evaluated for biocontrol efficiency. Using a multilocus sequence analysis and core genome alignment, we classified theP. syringaeisolates as members of phylogroup 2, related to other strains previously isolated fromPyrusandPrunus. An analysis of effector proteins demonstrated an evolutionary conservation of effectoromes across isolates classified in PG2 and yet uncovered unique effector profiles for each, including the two newly identified isolates. Whole-genome sequencing of the associated phage uncovered a novel phage genus related toPseudomonas syringaepv.actinidiaephage PHB09 and theFlaumdravirusgenus. Finally, usingin plantainfection assays, we demonstrate that the phage was equally useful in symptom mitigation of immature pear fruit regardless of the Pss strain tested. Overall, this study demonstrates the diversity ofP. syringaeand their viruses associated with ornamental pear trees, posing spill-over risks to commercial pear trees and the possibility of using phages as biocontrol agents to reduce the impact of disease.IMPORTANCEGlobal change exacerbates the spread and impact of pathogens, especially in agricultural settings. There is a clear need to better monitor the spread and diversity of plant pathogens, including in potential spillover hosts, and for the development of novel and sustainable control strategies. In this study, we characterize the first described strains ofPseudomonas syringaepv.syringaeisolated from Callery pear in Berkeley, California from diseased tissues in an urban environment. We show that these strains have divergent virulence profiles from previously described strains and that they can cause disease in commercial pears. Additionally, we describe a novel bacteriophage that is associated with these strains and explore its potential to act as a biocontrol agent. Together, the data presented here demonstrate that ornamental pear trees harbor novelP. syringaepv.syringaeisolates that potentially pose a risk to local fruit production, or vice versa—but also provide us with novel associated phages, effective in disease mitigation.
Houserova, Dominika; Huang, Yulong; Kasukurthi, Mohan V; Watters, Brianna C; Khan, Fiza F; Mehta, Raj V; Chaudhary, Neil Y; Roberts, Justin T; DeMeis, Jeffrey D; Hobbs, Trevor K; et al
(, bioRxiv)
ABSTRACT SalmonellaOuter Membrane Vesicles (OMVs) were recently shown to inhibit P22 bacteriophage infection. Furthermore, despite there being several published reports now independently describing (1) the marked prevalence of tRFs within secreted vesicle transcriptomes and (2) roles for specific tRFs in facilitating/inhibiting viral replication, there have been no examinations of the effects of vesicle-secreted tRFs on viral infection reported to date. Notably, while specific tRFs have been reported in a number of bacteria, the tRFs expressed by salmonellae have not been previously characterized. As such, we recently screened small RNA-seq datasets for the presence of recurrent, specifically excised tRFs and identified 31 recurrent, relatively abundant tRFs expressed bySalmonella entericaserovar Typhimurium (SL1344). What’s more, we findS. Typhimurium OMVs contain significant levels of tRFs highly complementary to knownSalmonella enterica-infecting bacteriophage with 17 of 31 tRFs bearing marked complementarity to at least one knownSalmonella enterica-infecting phage (averaging 97.4% complementarity over 22.9 nt). Most notably, tRNA-Thr-CGT-1-1, 44-73, bears 100% sequence complementary over its entire 30 nt length to 29 distinct, annotatedSalmonella enterica-infecting bacteriophage including P22. Importantly, we find inhibiting this tRF in secreted OMVs improves P22 infectivity in a dose dependent manner whereas raising OMV tRF levels conversely inhibits P22 infectivity. Furthermore, we find P22 phage pre-incubation with OMVs isolated from naïve, control SL1344S. Typhimurium, successfully rescues the ability ofS. Typhimurium transformed with a specific tRNA-Thr-CGT-1-1, 44-73 tRF inhibitor to defend against P22. Collectively, these experiments confirm tRFs secreted inS. Typhimurium OMVs are directly involved with and required for the ability of OMVs to defend against bacteriophage predation. As we find the majority of OMV tRFs are highly complementary to an array of knownSalmonella enterica-infecting bacteriophage, we suggest OMV tRFs may primarily function as a broadly acting, previously uncharacterized innate antiviral defense.
@article{osti_10391795,
place = {Country unknown/Code not available},
title = {Complete Genome Sequence of the Microbacterium Bacteriophage Chako},
url = {https://par.nsf.gov/biblio/10391795},
DOI = {10.1128/mra.01251-22},
abstractNote = {ABSTRACT We characterized the complete genome sequence of Chako, an obligate lytic bacteriophage with siphovirus morphology from subcluster EA1 that infects Microbacterium foliorum NRRL B-24224. Its 41.6-kb genome contains 62 putative protein-coding genes and is highly similar to that of bacteriophage HanSolo (99.26% nucleotide identity).},
journal = {Microbiology Resource Announcements},
author = {Milhaven, Mark and Cai, Lindsey and Cherian, Sanjana and Johnson, Kamalei and Salas Perez, Kevin and Blanco, Madison and Garg, Aman and Lobatos, Jackelyn and Mitra, Corinne and Strasser, Maria and Harms, Robert and Pfeifer, Susanne P.},
editor = {Roux, Simon}
}
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