Clades of huge phage from across Earth’s ecosystems

Author:

Al-Shayeb Basem,Sachdeva RohanORCID,Chen Lin-XingORCID,Ward Fred,Munk Patrick,Devoto Audra,Castelle Cindy J.,Olm Matthew R.,Bouma-Gregson Keith,Amano Yuki,He Christine,Méheust RaphaëlORCID,Brooks Brandon,Thomas Alex,Lavy Adi,Matheus-Carnevali Paula,Sun Christine,Goltsman Daniela S. A.,Borton Mikayla A.,Nelson Tara C.,Kantor Rose,Jaffe Alexander L.,Keren Ray,Farag Ibrahim F.,Lei Shufei,Finstad Kari,Amundson Ronald,Anantharaman Karthik,Zhou Jinglie,Probst Alexander J.,Power Mary E.,Tringe Susannah G.,Li Wen-Jun,Wrighton Kelly,Harrison Sue,Morowitz Michael,Relman David A.,Doudna Jennifer A,Lehours Anne-Catherine,Warren Lesley,Cate Jamie H. D.,Santini Joanne M.,Banfield Jillian F.ORCID

Abstract

Phage typically have small genomes and depend on their bacterial hosts for replication. DNA sequenced from many diverse ecosystems revealed hundreds of huge phage genomes, between 200 kbp and 716 kbp in length. Thirty-four genomes were manually curated to completion, including the largest phage genomes yet reported. Expanded genetic repertoires include diverse and new CRISPR-Cas systems, tRNAs, tRNA synthetases, tRNA modification enzymes, translation initiation and elongation factors, and ribosomal proteins. Phage CRISPR-Cas systems have the capacity to silence host transcription factors and translational genes, potentially as part of a larger interaction network that intercepts translation to redirect biosynthesis to phage-encoded functions. In addition, some phage may repurpose bacterial CRISPR-Cas systems to eliminate competing phage. We phylogenetically define major clades of huge phage from human and other animal microbiomes, oceans, lakes, sediments, soils and the built environment. We conclude that their large gene inventories reflect a conserved biological strategy, observed over a broad bacterial host range and across Earth’s ecosystems.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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