4.7 Article

Bacillus pumilus 15.1, a Strain Active against Ceratitis capitata, Contains a Novel Phage and a Phage-Related Particle with Bacteriocin Activity

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22158164

Keywords

Bacillus pumilus; bacteriophage; bacteriocin activity; PBSX; entomopathogen

Funding

  1. Andalucian Operative Program [B-BIO-081-UGR18]

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A 98.1 Kb genomic region from B. pumilus 15.1, isolated as an entomopathogen towards C. capitata, has been characterized to identify potential virulence factors. This study differentiates two regions responsible for producing a phage-like particle and a novel phage, respectively. The phage-like particle exhibits bacteriocin activity towards other B. pumilus strains, and the impact of both the phage-like particles and the phage on the toxicity towards C. capitata is evaluated.
A 98.1 Kb genomic region from B. pumilus 15.1, a strain isolated as an entomopathogen toward C. capitata, the Mediterranean fruit fly, has been characterised in search of potential virulence factors. The 98.1 Kb region shows a high number of phage-related protein-coding ORFs. Two regions with different phylogenetic origins, one with 28.7 Kb in size, highly conserved in Bacillus strains, and one with 60.2 Kb in size, scarcely found in Bacillus genomes are differentiated. The content of each region is thoroughly characterised using comparative studies. This study demonstrates that these two regions are responsible for the production, after mitomycin induction, of a phage-like particle that packages DNA from the host bacterium and a novel phage for B. pumilus, respectively. Both the phage-like particles and the novel phage are observed and characterised by TEM, and some of their structural proteins are identified by protein fingerprinting. In addition, it is found that the phage-like particle shows bacteriocin activity toward other B. pumilus strains. The effect of the phage-like particles and the phage in the toxicity of the strain toward C. capitata is also evaluated.

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