| Literature DB >> 35865922 |
Zhongjing Lu1, John Marchant1, Samantha Thompson1, Henry Melgarejo1, Dzhuliya Ignatova1, Sandra Kopić1, Rana Damaj1, Hedy Trejo1, Rodrigo Paramo1, Ashley Reed1, Fred Breidt2,3, Sophia Kathariou3.
Abstract
Salmonella is one of the leading causes of foodborne illnesses worldwide. The rapid emergence of multidrug-resistant Salmonella strains has increased global concern for salmonellosis. Recent studies have shown that bacteriophages (phages) are novel and the most promising antibacterial agents for biocontrol in foods because phages specifically kill target bacteria without affecting other bacteria, do not alter organoleptic properties or nutritional quality of foods, and are safe and environmentally friendly. Due to the vast variation in Salmonella serotypes, large numbers of different and highly virulent Salmonella phages with broad host ranges are needed. This study isolated 14 Salmonella phages from turkey fecal and cecal samples. Six phages (Φ205, Φ206, Φ207, ΦEnt, ΦMont, and Φ13314) were selected for characterization. These phages were from all three families in the Caudovirales order. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) revealed that each phage had a unique structural protein profile. Each phage had a distinct host range. Φ207 and ΦEnt are both siphophages. They shared eight hosts, including seven different Salmonella serovars and one Shigella sonnei strain. These two phages showed different restriction banding patterns generated through EcoRI or HindIII digestion, but shared three bands from EcoRI digestion. ΦEnt displayed the broadest and very unusual host range infecting 11 Salmonella strains from nine serovars and three Shigella strains from two species, and thus was further characterized. The one-step growth curve revealed that ΦEnt had a short latent period (10 min) and relatively large burst size (100 PFU/infected cell). ΦEnt and its host showed better thermal stabilities in tryptic soy broth than in saline at 63 or 72°C. In the model food system (cucumber juice or beef broth), ΦEnt infection [regardless of the multiplicity of infections (MOIs) of 1, 10, and 100] resulted in more than 5-log10 reduction in Salmonella concentration within 4 or 5 h. Such high lytic activity combined with its remarkably broad and unusual host range and good thermal stability suggested that ΦEnt is a novel Salmonella phage with great potential to be used as an effective biocontrol agent against diverse Salmonella serovars in foods.Entities:
Keywords: Salmonella; bacteriophage; biocontrol; food safety; phage ΦEnt
Year: 2022 PMID: 35865922 PMCID: PMC9294604 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.933751
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 6.064
Salmonella enterica serovars and strains used for phage isolation and phages isolated in this study.
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| Phage | ||
| ID | Strain | Name | Source |
| B0205 |
| Tc | |
| Φ205-2 | Tf | ||
| B0206 |
| Tc | |
| B0207 |
| Tc | |
| B0208 | Φ208 | Tc | |
| Φ208-2 | Tf | ||
| B0209 | Φ209 | Tc | |
| Φ209-2 | Tf | ||
| B0210 | Φ210 | Tc | |
| 125109 |
| Tf | |
| ΦEnt-2 | Tc | ||
| SGSC4911 | ΦNew | Tc | |
| SARB 30 |
| Tf | |
| ATCC 13314 |
| Tc | |
| B0038 | S. Typhimurium | N/A | Tc or Tf |
| ATCC 14028 | N/A | Tc or Tf | |
Host ranges of six Salmonella phages isolated from turkeys.
| Bacterial strain | Phage | ||||||
| ID | Name | Φ205 | Φ206 | Φ207 | ΦEnt | ΦMont | Φ13314 |
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| SGSC4914 |
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| SARB 59 | |||||||
| SGSC4905 |
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| SGSC4915 | |||||||
| SARB 32 | |||||||
| SGSC4906 |
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| SARB 62 |
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| SGSC4964 | |||||||
| S-500 |
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| SGSC4919 |
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| ATCC 29903 | |||||||
| ATCC 12022 | |||||||
| ATCC 13313 |
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| ATCC 25931 |
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| ATCC 29930 |
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| ATCC 9290 |
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| ATCC 8700 | |||||||
| B0241 | |||||||
| ATCC 25922 |
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| ATCC 13047 |
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FIGURE 1Transmission electron micrographs of six Salmonella phages isolated from turkeys.
FIGURE 2SDS-PAGE analysis of the structural proteins of six Salmonella phages isolated from turkeys. Lane M, molecular mass standard. The italicized letters (M, S, and P) below phage names stand for Myoviridae, Siphoviridae, and Podoviridae, respectively.
FIGURE 3Restriction banding patterns of phage DNAs upon digestion by endonuclease EcoRI and HindIII. Lane M: 1 kb ladder; Lanes 1 and 3: digestion of Φ207 DNA; Lanes 2 and 4: digestion of ΦEnt DNA.
FIGURE 4One-step growth curve of phage ΦEnt infecting Salmonella Thompson at MOI 0.01 in cucumber juice at 37°C. The latent period is approximately 10 min, and the burst size is about 100 phage particles per infected cell. Error bars indicate the standard error of the mean.
FIGURE 5Thermal stabilities of Salmonella phage ΦEnt and its host Salmonella Thompson in saline (A,B, respectively) and in TSB (C,D, respectively). Error bars indicate the standard error of the mean.
FIGURE 6Efficacy of phage infection by ΦEnt against S. Thompson in cucumber juice (A) and beef broth (B). Each point represents the mean ± standard error based on three measurements.