4.5 Article

crAssphage genomes identified in fecal samples of an adult and infants with evidence of positive genomic selective pressure within tail protein genes

期刊

VIRUS RESEARCH
卷 292, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2020.198219

关键词

Bacteriophage; crAssphage; South Africa; Selection; Tail protein

类别

资金

  1. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research, an NIH - NIAID [P30AI027757]
  2. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research, an NIH - NCI [P30AI027757]
  3. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research, an NIH - NIMH [P30AI027757]
  4. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research, an NIH - NIDA [P30AI027757]
  5. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research, an NIH - NICHD [P30AI027757]
  6. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research, an NIH - NHLBI [P30AI027757]
  7. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research, an NIH - NIA [P30AI027757]
  8. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research, an NIH - NIGMS [P30AI027757]
  9. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research, an NIH - NIDDK [P30AI027757]
  10. Canadian Institutes of Health Research HIV Vaccine Initiative [01044-000]
  11. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the NIH [R01AI131302, AI120714-01A1, R01HD102239-01A1]
  12. Wellcome Trust DELTAS Africa grant [107752/Z/15/Z]
  13. [R01HD10223901A1]
  14. [F32 HD102290-01]

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The study found elevated positive selection in the genomes of crAssphages, particularly in the RNA polymerase and phage tail protein encoding genes, potentially mediated by interactions between crAssphages and their bacterial partners.
crAssphages are a broad group of diverse bacteriophages in the order Caudovirales that have been found to be highly abundant in the human gastrointestinal tract. Despite their high prevalence, we have an incomplete understanding of how crAssphages shape and respond to ecological and evolutionary dynamics in the gut. Here, we report genomes of crAssphages from feces of one South African woman and three infants. Across the complete genome sequences of the South African crAssphages described here, we identify particularly elevated positive selection in RNA polymerase and phage tail protein encoding genes, contrasted against purifying selection, genome-wide. We further validate these findings against a crAssphage genome from previous studies. Together, our results suggest hotspots of selection within crAssphage RNA polymerase and phage tail protein encoding genes are potentially mediated by interactions between crAssphages and their bacterial partners.

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