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Mycobacterial nucleoid-associated protein Lsr2 is required for productive mycobacteriophage infection

Authors :
Charles L. Dulberger
Carlos A. Guerrero-Bustamante
Siân V. Owen
Sean Wilson
Michael G. Wuo
Rebecca A. Garlena
Lexi A. Serpa
Daniel A. Russell
Junhao Zhu
Ben J. Braunecker
Georgia R. Squyres
Michael Baym
Laura L. Kiessling
Ethan C. Garner
Eric J. Rubin
Graham F. Hatfull
Source :
Nature Microbiology. 8:695-710
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Mycobacteriophages are a diverse group of viruses infecting Mycobacterium with substantial therapeutic potential. However, as this potential becomes realized, the molecular details of phage infection and mechanisms of resistance remain ill-defined. Here we use live-cell fluorescence microscopy to visualize the spatiotemporal dynamics of mycobacteriophage infection in single cells and populations, showing that infection is dependent on the host nucleoid-associated Lsr2 protein. Mycobacteriophages preferentially adsorb at Mycobacterium smegmatis sites of new cell wall synthesis and following DNA injection, Lsr2 reorganizes away from host replication foci to establish zones of phage DNA replication (ZOPR). Cells lacking Lsr2 proceed through to cell lysis when infected but fail to generate consecutive phage bursts that trigger epidemic spread of phage particles to neighbouring cells. Many mycobacteriophages code for their own Lsr2-related proteins, and although their roles are unknown, they do not rescue the loss of host Lsr2.

Details

ISSN :
20585276
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c97cdc014b38bd235dc5cc85acd13f57
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-023-01333-x