4.6 Article

Genomic Analysis of Two Cold-Active Pseudoalteromonas Phages Isolated from the Continental Shelf in the Arctic Ocean

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 15, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v15102061

Keywords

cold-active; temperate; myovirus; Pseudoalteromonas; sediment; Arctic

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In this study, two cold-active bacteriophages, ACA1 and ACA2, were isolated from sediment samples taken from the western Arctic Ocean. These phages were able to replicate at a low temperature of 1 degree C and had typical myovirus morphology. The complete genome sequences of ACA1 and ACA2 were very similar, encoding lysogeny-related proteins. The study expands our knowledge of P2-like phage diversity in Pseudoalteromonas and demonstrates their presence in the Arctic niche.
Cold-active bacteriophages are bacterial viruses that infect and replicate at low temperatures (<= 4 degrees C). Understanding remains limited of how cold-active phage-host systems sustain high viral abundance despite the persistently low temperatures in pelagic sediments in polar seas. In this study, two Pseudoalteromonas phages, ACA1 and ACA2, were isolated from sediment core samples of the continental shelf in the western Arctic Ocean. These phages exhibited successful propagation at a low temperature of 1 degrees C and displayed typical myovirus morphology with isometric icosahedral heads and contractile tails. The complete genome sequences of phages ACA1 and ACA2 were 36,825 bp and 36,826 bp in size, respectively, sharing almost the same gene content. These are temperate phages encoding lysogeny-related proteins such as anti-repressor, immunity repressor and integrase. The absence of cross-infection between the host strains, which were genomically distinct Pseudoalteromonas species, can likely be attributed to heavy divergence in the anti-receptor apparently mediated by an associated diversity-generating retroelement. HHpred searching identified genes for all of the structural components of a P2-like phage (family Peduoviridae), although the whole of the Peduoviridae family appeared to be divided between two anciently diverged tail modules. In contrast, Blast matching and whole genome tree analysis are dominated by a nonstructural gene module sharing high similarity with Pseudoalteromonas phage C5a (founder of genus Catalunyavirus). This study expands the knowledge of diversity of P2-like phages known to inhabit Peudoalteromonas and demonstrates their presence in the Arctic niche.

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