4.6 Article

A Novel Freshwater Cyanophage Mae-Yong1326-1 Infecting Bloom-Forming Cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14092051

Keywords

Microcystis aeruginosa; cyanophage; genome; phylogenetic analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program [2018YFA0903000]
  2. Open Fund of Key Laboratory of Marine Biogenetic Resources of State Oceanic Administration [HY201602]
  3. K.C. Wong Magna Fund of Ningbo University

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This study isolated a cyanophage named Mae-Yong1326-1 using Microcystis aeruginosa as an indicator host. Mae-Yong1326-1 has a wide host range, stable characteristics, and a large burst size. Genome comparison and protein tree analysis revealed that Mae-Yong1326-1 belongs to an unknown new genus. This study enriched the understanding of freshwater cyanophages.
Microcystis aeruginosa is a major harmful cyanobacterium causing water bloom worldwide. Cyanophage has been proposed as a promising tool for cyanobacterial bloom. In this study, M. aeruginosa FACHB-1326 was used as an indicator host to isolate cyanophage from Lake Taihu. The isolated Microcystis cyanophage Mae-Yong1326-1 has an elliptical head of about 47 nm in diameter and a slender flexible tail of about 340 nm in length. Mae-Yong1326-1 could lyse cyanobacterial strains across three orders (Chroococcales, Nostocales, and Oscillatoriales) in the host range experiments. Mae-Yong1326-1 was stable in stability tests, maintaining high titers at 0-40 degrees C and at a wide pH range of 3-12. Mae-Yong 1326-1 has a burst size of 329 PFU/cell, which is much larger than the reported Microcystis cyanophages so far. The complete genome of Mae-Yong1326-1 is a double-stranded DNA of 48, 822 bp, with a G + C content of 71.80% and long direct terminal repeats (DTR) of 366 bp, containing 57 predicted ORFs. No Mae-Yong1326-1 ORF was found to be associated with virulence factor or antibiotic resistance. PASC scanning illustrated that the highest nucleotide sequence similarity between Mae-Yong1326-1 and all known phages in databases was only 17.75%, less than 70% (the threshold to define a genus), which indicates that Mae-Yong1326-1 belongs to an unknown new genus. In the proteomic tree based on genome-wide sequence similarities, Mae-Yong1326-1 distantly clusters with three unclassified Microcystis cyanophages (MinS1, Mwe-Yong1112-1, and Mwes-Yong2). These four Microcystis cyanophages form a monophyletic clade, which separates at a node from the other clade formed by two independent families (Zierdtviridae and Orlajensenviridae) of Caudoviricetes class. We propose to establish a new family to harbor the Microcystis cyanophages Mae-Yong1326-1, MinS1, Mwe-Yong1112-1, and Mwes-Yong2. This study enriched the understanding of freshwater cyanophages.

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