| Literature DB >> 26273592 |
Anna Krasowska1, Anna Biegalska1, Daria Augustyniak2, Marcin Łoś3, Malwina Richert4, Marcin Łukaszewicz1.
Abstract
Bacteriophages have been suggested as an alternative approach to reduce the amount of pathogens in various applications. Bacteriophages of various specificity and virulence were isolated as a means of controlling food-borne pathogens. We studied the interaction of bacteriophages with Bacillus species, which are very often persistent in industrial applications such as food production due to their antibiotic resistance and spore formation. A comparative study using electron microscopy, PFGE, and SDS-PAGE as well as determination of host range, pH and temperature resistance, adsorption rate, latent time, and phage burst size was performed on three phages of the Myoviridae family and one phage of the Siphoviridae family which infected Bacillus subtilis strains. The phages are morphologically different and characterized by icosahedral heads and contractile (SIOΦ, SUBω, and SPOσ phages) or noncontractile (ARπ phage) tails. The genomes of SIOΦ and SUBω are composed of 154 kb. The capsid of SIOΦ is composed of four proteins. Bacteriophages SPOσ and ARπ have genome sizes of 25 kbp and 40 kbp, respectively. Both phages as well as SUBω phage have 14 proteins in their capsids. Phages SIOΦ and SPOσ are resistant to high temperatures and to the acid (4.0) and alkaline (9.0 and 10.0) pH.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26273592 PMCID: PMC4529890 DOI: 10.1155/2015/179597
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Bacillus subtilis strains and bacteriophages.
| Number | Strain | Origin | Bacteriophage typing | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SUB | SPO | SIOΦ | AR | |||
| 1 |
| Polish Academy of Sciences, Wroclaw | + | + | − | − |
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| 2 |
| Institute, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, Holland | 0 | + | 0 | 0 |
| 3 |
| + | + | − | − | |
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| 4 |
| University of Wroclaw, Faculty of Biotechnology | − | − | + | − |
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| 5 |
| Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences, Faculty of Food Science | + | + | − | + |
| 6 |
| + | + | − | + | |
| 7 |
| + | + | − | + | |
| 8 |
| + | + | − | + | |
| 9 |
| + | + | − | + | |
| 10 |
| 0 | + | − | 0 | |
| 11 |
| + | + | − | + | |
| 12 |
| 0 | − | 0 | 0 | |
| 13 |
| + | + | − | + | |
| 14 |
| 0 | + | − | 0 | |
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| 15 |
| Polish Academy of Sciences, Wroclaw | + | + | − | − |
| 16 |
| + | + | + | − | |
| 17 |
| 0 | + | − | 0 | |
| 18 |
| + | + | − | − | |
| 19 |
| + | + | − | 0 | |
| 20 |
| + | + | − | − | |
(−) Plaques not formed, (+) distinct clear plaques, and (0) hazy plaques.
Phage titers (pfu/mL) for B. subtilis strains.
| Phage | SIOΦ | SUB | SPO | AR |
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| Phage titer | 1013 | 1010 | 1010 | 1012 |
Figure 1Transmission electron microscopic images of (a) B. subtilis 10 phage SIOΦ, (b) B. subtilis ATCC 6633 phage SUBω, (c) B. subtilis SWV215 phage SPOσ, and B. subtilis B3 phage ARπ.
Particle sizes of SIOΦ, SUBω, SPOσ, and ARπ phages.
| Host | Phage | Head diameter | Tail length |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| SIOΦ | 100 × 90 | 208 |
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| SUB | 67 × 67 | 223 |
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| SPO | 91 × 87 | 70 |
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| AR | 41 × 47 | 342 |
Figure 2Thermal stability test of phages: (a) SIOΦ, (b) SUBω, (c) SPOσ, and (d) ARπ.
Figure 3pH stability test of phages: (a) SIOΦ, (b) SUBω, (c) SPOσ, and (d) ARπ. Data are the means from three independent experiments +SD.
Biological characteristics of SIOΦ, SUBω, SPOσ, and ARπ phages.
| Phage | Adsorption | Burst size | Latent period | Growth time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SIOΦ | 50 | ∼74 | 55–65 | 40 |
| SUB | 12 | ∼8 | 55–65 | 30 |
| SPO | 7.5 | ∼23 | 75–85 | 40 |
| AR | 12 | ∼37 | 55–65 | 30 |
Figure 4Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of undigested phage DNAs. Genome sizes were estimated by using Low Range PFG marker (M).
Figure 5SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis of indicated virion proteins estimated by using PageRuler prestained protein ladder plus (M).