Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The global bacteriophage population is large, dynamic, old, and highly diverse genetically. Many phages are tailed and contain double-stranded DNA, but these remain poorly characterized genomically. A collection of over 1,000 phages infecting
Mycobacterium smegmatis
reveals the diversity of phages of a common bacterial host, but their relationships to phages of phylogenetically proximal hosts are not known. Comparative sequence analysis of 79 phages isolated on
Gordonia
shows these also to be diverse and that the phages can be grouped into 14 clusters of related genomes, with an additional 14 phages that are “singletons” with no closely related genomes. One group of six phages is closely related to Cluster A mycobacteriophages, but the other
Gordonia
phages are distant relatives and share only 10% of their genes with the mycobacteriophages. The
Gordonia
phage genomes vary in genome length (17.1 to 103.4 kb), percentage of GC content (47 to 68.8%), and genome architecture and contain a variety of features not seen in other phage genomes. Like the mycobacteriophages, the highly mosaic
Gordonia
phages demonstrate a spectrum of genetic relationships. We show this is a general property of bacteriophages and suggest that any barriers to genetic exchange are soft and readily violable.
IMPORTANCE
Despite the numerical dominance of bacteriophages in the biosphere, there is a dearth of complete genomic sequences. Current genomic information reveals that phages are highly diverse genomically and have mosaic architectures formed by extensive horizontal genetic exchange. Comparative analysis of 79 phages of
Gordonia
shows them to not only be highly diverse, but to present a spectrum of relatedness. Most are distantly related to phages of the phylogenetically proximal host
Mycobacterium smegmatis
, although one group of
Gordonia
phages is more closely related to mycobacteriophages than to the other
Gordonia
phages. Phage genome sequence space remains largely unexplored, but further isolation and genomic comparison of phages targeted at related groups of hosts promise to reveal pathways of bacteriophage evolution.
Funder
HHS | National Institutes of Health
National Science Foundation
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
144 articles.
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