4.6 Article

Expression and evolutionary patterns of mycobacteriophage D29 and its temperate close relatives

Journal

BMC MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12866-017-1131-2

Keywords

Bacteriophage evolution; RNAseq; sRNA

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM116884]
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute [54308198]
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [1247842]

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Background: Mycobacteriophages are viruses that infect Mycobacterium hosts. A large collection of phages known to infect the same bacterial host strain - Mycobacterium smegmatis mc(2)155 - exhibit substantial diversity and characteristically mosaic architectures. The well-studied lytic mycobacteriophage D29 appears to be a deletion derivative of a putative temperate parent, although its parent has yet to be identified. Results: Here we describe three newly-isolated temperate phages - Kerberos, Pomar16 and StarStuff - that are related to D29, and are predicted to be very close relatives of its putative temperate parent, revealing the repressor and additional genes that are lost in D29. Transcriptional profiles show the patterns of both lysogenic and lytic gene expression and identify highly-expressed, abundant, stable, small non-coding transcripts made from the P-left early lytic promoter, and which are toxic to M. smegmatis. Conclusions: Comparative genomics of phages D29, Kerberos, Pomar16 and StarStuff provide insights into bacteriophage evolution, and comparative transcriptomics identifies the pattern of lysogenic and lytic expression with unusual features including highly expressed, small, non-coding RNAs.

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