Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Bacterial Pathogenesis and Immunology, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10065
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Stable infection of
Bacillus anthracis
laboratory strains with environmental bacteriophages confers survival phenotypes in soil and earthworm intestinal niches (R. Schuch and V. A. Fischetti, PLoS One 4:e6532, 2009). Here, the natural occurrence of two such
B. anthracis
-infective bacteriophages, Wip1 and Wip4, was examined in the intestines of
Eisenia fetida
earthworms as part of a 6-year longitudinal study at a Pennsylvania forest site. The Wip1 tectivirus was initially dominant before being supplanted by the Wip4 siphovirus, which was then dominant for the next 3 years. In a host range analysis of a wide-ranging group of
Bacillus
species and related organisms, Wip1 and Wip4 were both infective only toward
B. anthracis
and certain
B. cereus
strains. The natural host of Wip4 remained constant for 3 years and was a
B. cereus
strain that expressed a
B. anthracis
-like surface polysaccharide at septal positions on the cell surface. Next, a novel metagenomic approach was used to determine the extent to which such
B. cereus
- and
B. anthracis
-like strains are found in worms from two geographical locations. Three different enrichment strategies were used for metagenomic DNA isolation, based either on the ability of
B. cereus
sensu lato to form heat-resistant spores, the sensitivity of
B. anthracis
to the PlyG lysin, or the selective amplification of environmental phages cocultured with
B. anthracis
. Findings from this work indicate that
B. cereus
sensu lato and its phages are common inhabitants of earthworm intestines.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
33 articles.
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