| Literature DB >> 30305030 |
Peng Luo1,2, Long Yun1,3, Yingying Li1,3, Yushun Tian1,3, Qiuting Liu1,3, Wen Huang4,5, Chaoqun Hu6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Biocontrol of bacterial pathogens by bacteriophages (phages) represents a promising strategy. Vibrio alginolyticus, a gram-negative bacterium, is a notorious pathogen responsible for the loss of economically important farmed marine animals. To date, few V. alginolyticus phages have been successfully isolated, and only three complete genome sequences of them have been released. The limited available phage resources and poor genomic data hamper research on V. alginolyticus phages and their applications for the biocontrol of V. alginolyticus.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteriophage; Endolysin; Holin; Vibrio alginolyticus
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30305030 PMCID: PMC6180450 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-018-5131-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Electron micrograph of V. alginolyticus and phage Vp670. a A normal V. alginolyticus cell. b An infected V. alginolyticus cell on the verge of lysis. Numerous phage particles (shown by a black arrow) have been assembled within the cell. c The morphology of phage Vp670. d The short tail of phage Vp670 is shown by the black arrow
Fig. 2One-step growth curve and adsorption rate of phage Vp670. a One-step growth curve of phage Vp670. b Adsorption rate of phage Vp670. Triplicate samples were used in each assay
Predicted ORFs of Vibrio alginolyticus phage Vp670a
| ORFs | Start | End | Length (bp) | Molecular mass (kD) | Coding for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 114 | 2267 | 2153 | 78.94 | Virion protein |
| 2 | 2385 | 5204 | 2819 | 103.36 | Phage T7 fiber protein |
| 3 | 5213 | 5398 | 185 | 6.78 | Phage holin, HolA |
| 4 | 5400 | 5744 | 344 | 12.61 | Small terminase subunit |
| 5 | 5744 | 7618 | 1874 | 68.71 | Large terminase subunit |
| 8 | 8496 | 8885 | 389 | 14.26 | Endolysin, CwlQ |
| 13 | 11,660 | 11,821 | 161 | 5.90 | Caskin-2/caskin-1 |
| 14 | 11,894 | 12,826 | 932 | 34.17 | Protein kinase |
| 16 | 13,113 | 15,899 | 2786 | 102.15 | DNA-dependent RNA polymerase |
| 23 | 17,580 | 19,676 | 2096 | 76.85 | Hydrolase/Topoisomerase-primase |
| 26 | 20,690 | 23,233 | 2543 | 93.24 | Putative DNA polymerase |
| 33 | 25,816 | 27,036 | 1220 | 44.73 | Phage exonuclease |
| 34 | 27,020 | 27,457 | 437 | 16.02 | Endonuclease VII |
| 35 | 27,457 | 28,473 | 1016 | 37.25 | Calcineurin-like Phosphoesterase |
| 37 | 28,865 | 29,410 | 545 | 19.98 | Phosphomevalonate kinase |
| 38 | 29,410 | 30,420 | 1010 | 37.03 | Adenylation DNA ligase-like protein |
| 41 | 30,888 | 31,352 | 464 | 17.01 | Putative acetyltransferase |
| 43 | 31,537 | 33,165 | 1628 | 59.69 | Phage head to tail connecting protein |
| 44 | 33,165 | 34,064 | 899 | 32.96 | Scaffolding protein |
| 45 | 34,112 | 35,263 | 1151 | 42.20 | Major capsid protein |
| 46 | 35,331 | 35,978 | 647 | 23.72 | Tail protein |
| 47 | 35,981 | 38,602 | 2621 | 96.10 | Tail protein |
| 48 | 38,612 | 39,217 | 605 | 22.18 | Putative internal virion protein A |
aA total of 26 ORFs are predicted to encode for hypothetical proteins, which are omitted from the table
Fig. 3Comparative genomic analysis of phage Vp670 and closely related phage φA318. Comparisons between regions < 50 bp are filtered. Red areas indicate homologous regions and the numbers in them show the identity values of the compared regions. Blue arrows represent the ORFs coding for known proteins. Black arrows represent the ORFs coding for hypothetical proteins. Green arrows represent the interesting genes analyzed in this study. Asterisks represent unique ORFs found in the genome of Vp670. Purple triangular symbols at the ends of Vp670 genome represent two direct repeats
Fig. 4Phylogenetic tree based on the DNA polymerase sequences of phages in the family of Podoviridae. The tree was constructed using the neighbor-joining method. It shows that the position of V. alginolyticus phage Vp670 (shown by the black arrow) is within the subfamily Autographivirinae, closely related to Enterobacteria phage SP6. The numbers at the nodes indicate the levels of bootstrap support based on data for 1000 replicates. The bar shows 20% sequence divergence
Fig. 5Structural domain and hydrophilicity prediction of HolA from Vp670. a Transmembrane domain analysis by TMHMM. b Hydrophilicity analysis shows that HolA has a hydrophilic C terminus
Fig. 6The impact of the expression of holA and cwlQ on the survival of the host cells. “-” represents the blocked expression of target genes by D-glucose and “+” represents the expression of target genes activated by L-arabinose. a Quantification of the survival of E. coli cells carrying different recombinant plasmids. LPN027 (pBAD18kan), LPN028 (pBAD18-holA), LPN029 (pBAD18-cwlQ), and LPN030 (pBAD18-holA-cwlQ). b Quantification of the V. alginolyticus cells carrying different expression plasmids. LPN040 (pBAD18kan), LPN041 (pBAD18-holA), LPN042 (pBAD18-cwlQ), and LPN043 (pBAD18-holA-cwlQ). Triplicate samples were used in each assay
Fig. 7Electron micrograph of the induced V. alginolyticus cells. a LPN040 cells without the expression of holA or cwlQ. b LPN041 cells with the expression of holA. White arrows show the bubbles on the surfaces of the cells. c Enlarged image of a LPN041 cell that expresses holA. White boxes indicates two bubbles. d LPN042 cells with the expression of cwlQ. e LPN043 cells with the expression of holA and cwlQ. f Enlarged image of a LPN043 cell that expresses holA and cwlQ