| Literature DB >> 33791236 |
C Brian Fitzgerald1, Andrey N Shkoporov1, Aditya Upadrasta1, Ekaterina V Khokhlova1, R Paul Ross1, Colin Hill1.
Abstract
Recent years have been marked by the growing interest towards virulent and temperate bacteriophage populations inhabiting the human lower gastrointestinal tract - the gut phageome. A number of studies demonstrated high levels of specificity and temporal stability of individual gut phageomes, as well as their specific alterations in disease cohorts, in parallel with changes in the bacteriome. It has been speculated that phages might have an active role in shaping the taxonomic composition and functional properties of the human gut bacteriome. An overwhelming majority of gut bacteriophages, however, remain uncultured, unclassified, and their specific hosts and infection strategies are still unknown. They are often referred to as "the viral dark matter". A possible breakthrough in understanding of the phageome can only become possible when a significant proportion of the "the viral dark matter" is identified and linked to bacterial hosts. Here, we describe a method that enables rapid discovery and host-linking of novel bacteriophages in the gut via a combination of serial enrichment cultures and shotgun metagenomics of viral DNA. Using this approach dozens of novel and previously known bacteriophages were detected, including the ones infecting difficult-to-culture anaerobic bacteria. The majority of phages failed to produce lysis and propagate on host cultures in traditional assays. The newly identified phages include representatives of Siphoviridae, Myoviridae, Podoviridae, and crAss-like viruses, infecting diverse bacterial taxa of Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria, Verrucomicrobia and Proteobacteria phyla. The proposed new method has a potential for high-throughput screening applications for mass discovery of new phages in different environments.Entities:
Keywords: bacteriophage; enrichment cultures; human gut microbiome; metagenomics; phageome; virome
Year: 2021 PMID: 33791236 PMCID: PMC8005731 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.616918
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Conceptual diagram of the phage enrichment method (Created using BioRender.com).
Figure 2Enrichment of pooled human faecal filtrates in the presence of 100 individual bacterial strains recovers hundreds of viral genomic fragments. (A) Compositional bar charts reflecting relative abundance of individual viral genomic contigs (randomly coloured) in enriched and non-enriched original pooled faecal filtrates (located at arrow starts). Samples are grouped by faecal pool used for enrichment (“A”, “B”, or “C”) and ordered by fraction of reads aligned to viral contigs (high to low). Black segments represent fractions of reads aligned to contigs of non-viral origin. Sample labelled with black dot is a blank MDA amplification control. (B) distribution of contigs by length and sequence coverage, overlayed by viral taxonomic assignment data. (C) PCoA ordination of samples based on Spearman’s rank correlations of relative abundance of viral contigs.
Figure 3Fifty six strongly enriched viral contigs represent diverse members of the order Caudovirales and replicated in the presence of typical human gut bacteria. (A) Z-scores of relative abundance of 56 manually selected viral genomic contigs across all study samples. Specific enrichment in one or a few related strains is a typical result. (B) Heatmap of scaled and centred relative abundance of 56 contigs across all 128 samples. (C) Circular genome of 35.3 kb Bacteroides uniformis DSM6597 phage; (D) circular genome of 46.4 kb temperate Siphoviridae phage infecting Anaerostipes hadrus APC942/1; (E) circular genome of a 168.6 kb E. coli phage; (F) circular genome of a 40.3 kb Subdoligranulum sp. APC924/74 inducible prophage; (G) circular genome of a 104.9 kb crAss-like phage of Prevotella stercorea DSM 18206.
Figure 4Temperate Siphoviridae phage φCs5676-1 isolated from one of the enriched filtrates infects Clostridium scindens DSM 5676. (A) formation of plaques in 0.4% YCFA-GSCM agar overlays with C. scindens DSM 5676; (B) transmission electron micrograph of φCs5676-1 particles at 160,000× magnification; (C) circularised map of φCs5676-1 genome showing distinct morphogenesis, lysogeny, and replication modules.