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Phage-specific metabolic reprogramming of virocells
- Source :
- The ISME Journal
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Ocean viruses are abundant and infect 20–40% of surface microbes. Infected cells, termed virocells, are thus a predominant microbial state. Yet, virocells and their ecosystem impacts are understudied, thus precluding their incorporation into ecosystem models. Here we investigated how unrelated bacterial viruses (phages) reprogram one host into contrasting virocells with different potential ecosystem footprints. We independently infected the marine Pseudoalteromonas bacterium with siphovirus PSA-HS2 and podovirus PSA-HP1. Time-resolved multi-omics unveiled drastically different metabolic reprogramming and resource requirements by each virocell, which were related to phage–host genomic complementarity and viral fitness. Namely, HS2 was more complementary to the host in nucleotides and amino acids, and fitter during infection than HP1. Functionally, HS2 virocells hardly differed from uninfected cells, with minimal host metabolism impacts. HS2 virocells repressed energy-consuming metabolisms, including motility and translation. Contrastingly, HP1 virocells substantially differed from uninfected cells. They repressed host transcription, responded to infection continuously, and drastically reprogrammed resource acquisition, central carbon and energy metabolisms. Ecologically, this work suggests that one cell, infected versus uninfected, can have immensely different metabolisms that affect the ecosystem differently. Finally, we relate phage–host genome complementarity, virocell metabolic reprogramming, and viral fitness in a conceptual model to guide incorporating viruses into ecosystem models.
- Subjects :
- Genetics
0303 health sciences
biology
Ecology
030306 microbiology
biology.organism_classification
Microbiology
Genome
Article
Microbial ecology
03 medical and health sciences
Pseudoalteromonas
Transcription (biology)
Viruses
Environmental Microbiology
Heterochromatin protein 1
Ecosystem
Bacteriophages
Bacterial virus
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Bacteria
030304 developmental biology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17517370
- Volume :
- 14
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The ISME journal
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a45492989f9fec81be733653b2043663