Heat adaptation of phage T7 under an extended genetic code

Author:

Cole Austin W1,Tran Steven D1,Ellington Andrew D1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Biosciences, Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Texas, 2500 Speedway Ave., MBB 3.424, Austin, TX 78712, USA

Abstract

Abstract While bacteriophages have previously been used as a model system to understand thermal adaptation, most adapted genomes observed to date contain very few modifications and cover a limited temperature range. Here, we set out to investigate genome adaptation to thermal stress by adapting six populations of T7 bacteriophage virions to increasingly stringent heat challenges. Further, we provided three of the phage populations’ access to a new genetic code in which Amber codons could be read as selenocysteine, potentially allowing the formation of more stable selenide-containing bonds. Phage virions responded to the thermal challenges with a greater than 10°C increase in heat tolerance and fixed highly reproducible patterns of non-synonymous substitutions and genome deletions. Most fixed mutations mapped to either the tail complex or to the three internal virion proteins that form a pore across the E. coli cell membrane during DNA injection. However, few global changes in Amber codon usage were observed, with only one natural Amber codon being lost. These results reinforce a model in which adaptation to thermal stress proceeds via the cumulative fixation of a small set of highly adaptive substitutions and that adaptation to new genetic codes proceeds only slowly, even with the possibility of potential phenotypic advantages.

Funder

Welch Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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