| Literature DB >> 21429206 |
Pieter-Jan Ceyssens1, Thea Glonti, Ndrew M Kropinski, Rob Lavigne, Nina Chanishvili, Leonid Kulakov, Nino Lashkhi, Marina Tediashvili, Maya Merabishvili.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although horizontal gene transfer plays a pivotal role in bacteriophage evolution, many lytic phage genomes are clearly shaped by vertical evolution. We investigated the influence of minor genomic deletions and insertions on various phage-related phenotypic and serological properties.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21429206 PMCID: PMC3072928 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-8-134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Overview of ϕKMV-related bacteriophages included in this study, all infecting P. aeruginosa.
| Phage | Isolated in | Genome (bp) | # ORFs | DTR length | GC (%) | ϕ | Accession number | Latent period (min) | Burst size (PFU/cell) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moscow, Russia | 42,519 | 52 | 414 | 62.3 | 100 | NC_005045 | 1.6 × 10-8 | 28 | 116 | 259 | 849 | |
| Leuven, Belgium | 43,200 | 54 | 428 | 62.6 | 83 | NC_009935 | - | 27 | 120 | 87.5 | - | |
| Leuven, Belgium | 43,548 | 54 | 472 | 62.2 | 89 | NC_010326 | 1.2 × 10-7 | 22 | 122 | - | - | |
| Moscow, Russia | 43,152 | 53 | 454 | 62.8 | 90 | NC_012418 | 1.5 × 10-8 | 23 | 129 | 56.2 | - | |
| Tbilisi, Georgia | 42,721 | 51 | 422 | 62.3 | 94 | - | ND | ND | ND | - | 23 | |
| Tbilisi, Georgia | 42,961 | 54 | 488 | 62.0 | 97 | NC_011107 | 9.2 × 10-9 | 21 | 116 | 737 | 51 | |
| Tbilisi, Georgia | 42,954 | 52 | 413 | 62.0 | 95 | NC_011105 | 7.3 × 10-9 | 21 | 134 | 598 | 679 | |
| Tbilisi, Georgia | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | - | 2.1 × 10-8 | 25 | 166 | 257 | 857 | |
| Tbilisi, Georgia | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | - | ND | ND | ND | 60 | 753 | |
| Leuven, Belgium | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | - | ND | ND | ND | 270 | - | |
| Leuven, Belgium | 41,593 | 56 | 298 | 60.9 | ND | NC_009936 | 3.9 × 10-9 | 41 | 225 | - | - |
a Identity with ϕKMV, expressed as % identical nucleotides according to the Stretcher algorithm (EMBOSS suite).
b The adsorption constant k was calculated from the unabsorbed phage at a multiplicity of infection of 1:1 by applying the formula ka = 2.3/Bt log P0/P, where P0 is initial number of phage, P is number of unabsorbed phage particles after time t and B is number of bacteria (4). ND, not determined.
c Serological neutralization assay using PT5 and PNC101 APS. Dilutions (1/50- 1/1000) of APS were mixed with 106 bacteriophage, samples were titered after different incubation times (5, 15 and 30 min) at 37°C. K, rate constant of neutralization, defined as k = 2.3 D/t logP0/P, where P0 - count of bacteriophage plaques at zero time, P - count of bacteriophage plaques after t time, D - dilution of APS.
Figure 1Host range analysis of the ϕKMV-like viruses. A. Host range analysis of 'phiKMV-like viruses' using a collection of 114 clinical P. aeruginosa strains. In this assay, 106 pfu were spotted on a bacterial lawn and checked for lysis. See additional files for more information on the P. aeruginosa strains and for detailed spectra. B. Host range comparison of four phages displaying >94% nucleotide identity throughout their genomes, stating the number of strains which are uniquely or commonly lysed by PNM, PT2, PT5 and phiKMV.
Figure 2Comparative genomic analysis of the ϕKMV-like viruses. The predicted open reading frames of all sequenced ϕKMV-like phages are shown. Their amino acid identity to the corresponding ORF of ϕKMV is indicated in different shades of grey. ORFs unique to each phage are not colored, while predicted functions of the annotated genes are indicated on top. Functional equivalent genes are connected with broken lines. Gene annotation was performed as described elsewhere (Ceyssens et al., 2006).