Affiliation:
1. Dairy Products Research Centre
2. Dairy Production Research Centre, Teagasc, Moorepark, Fermoy, Co. Cork
3. Department of Microbiology, University College Cork
4. Department of Biological Sciences, Cork Institute of Technology
5. University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, Memphis, Tennessee 38163
6. Alimentary Pharmabiotic Centre, Cork, Ireland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Phage K is a polyvalent phage of the
Myoviridae
family which is active against a wide range of staphylococci. Phage genome sequencing revealed a linear DNA genome of 127,395 bp, which carries 118 putative open reading frames. The genome is organized in a modular form, encoding modules for lysis, structural proteins, DNA replication, and transcription. Interestingly, the structural module shows high homology to the structural module from
Listeria
phage A511, suggesting intergenus horizontal transfer. In addition, phage K exhibits the potential to encode proteins necessary for its own replisome, including DNA ligase, primase, helicase, polymerase, RNase H, and DNA binding proteins. Phage K has a complete absence of GATC sites, making it insensitive to restriction enzymes which cleave this sequence. Three introns (
lys
-I1,
pol
-I2, and
pol
-I3) encoding putative endonucleases were located in the genome. Two of these (
pol
-I2 and
pol
-I3) were found to interrupt the DNA polymerase gene, while the other (
lys
-I1) interrupts the lysin gene. Two of the introns encode putative proteins with homology to HNH endonucleases, whereas the other encodes a 270-amino-acid protein which contains two zinc fingers (CX
2
CX
22
CX
2
C and CX
2
CX
23
CX
2
C). The availability of the genome of this highly virulent phage, which is active against infective staphylococci, should provide new insights into the biology and evolution of large broad-spectrum polyvalent phages.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology