4.7 Article

Broad host range may be a key to long-term persistence of bacteriophages infecting intestinal Bacteroidaceae species

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-25636-x

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Funding

  1. Slovenian Research Agency [P3-0387, P4-0097]

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Longitudinal studies have shown that certain bacterial lineages and strains in the human gut microbiota can persist for years, and this study extends the findings to gut bacteriophages. The researchers isolated and confirmed the persistence of Bacteroides and Phocaeicola species and strains in the human gut, and identified 28 genetically distinct phages.
The longitudinal studies have found that the human gut microbiota is stable over time with some major bacterial lineages or even strains persisting for years. This was recently extended to gut bacteriophages using the metagenomic data. Here, we focused on cultivation of the major Bacteroidetes of human gut, the Bacteroides and Phocaeicola strains, and their bacteriophages from two healthy donors. The persistence of Bacteroides and Phocaeicola species and strains was confirmed. We isolated 28 genetically different phages grouped into seven distinct clusters, two of these were new. Moreover, the bacteriophages from several groups, although being genetically quite homogeneous, had the ability to infect the strains belonging to different species isolated from several sampling time-points and different donors. We propose that the ability to infect several host species, which differ in their nutritional niches, may promote long-term persistence of dominant gut bacteriophage groups.

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