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Alteromonas Myovirus V22 Represents a New Genus of Marine Bacteriophages Requiring a Tail Fiber Chaperone for Host Recognition

Authors :
Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Fisiología, Genética y Microbiología
Gonzalez-Serrano, Rafael
Dunne, Matthew
Rosselli, Riccardo
Martín Cuadrado, Ana Belén
Grosboillot, Virginie
Zinsli, Léa V.
Roda-Garcia, Juan J.
Loessner, Martin J.
Rodriguez-Valera, Francisco
Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Fisiología, Genética y Microbiología
Gonzalez-Serrano, Rafael
Dunne, Matthew
Rosselli, Riccardo
Martín Cuadrado, Ana Belén
Grosboillot, Virginie
Zinsli, Léa V.
Roda-Garcia, Juan J.
Loessner, Martin J.
Rodriguez-Valera, Francisco
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Marine phages play a variety of critical roles in regulating the microbial composition of our oceans. Despite constituting the majority of genetic diversity within these environments, there are relatively few isolates with complete genome sequences or in-depth analyses of their host interaction mechanisms, such as characterization of their receptor binding proteins (RBPs). Here, we present the 92,760-bp genome of the Alteromonas-targeting phage V22. Genomic and morphological analyses identify V22 as a myovirus; however, due to a lack of sequence similarity to any other known myoviruses, we propose that V22 be classified as the type phage of a new Myoalterovirus genus within the Myoviridae family. V22 shows gene homology and synteny with two different subfamilies of phages infecting enterobacteria, specifically within the structural region of its genome. To improve our understanding of the V22 adsorption process, we identified putative RBPs (gp23, gp24, and gp26) and tested their ability to decorate the V22 propagation strain, Alteromonas mediterranea PT11, as recombinant green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged constructs. Only GFP-gp26 was capable of bacterial recognition and identified as the V22 RBP. Interestingly, production of functional GFP-gp26 required coexpression with the downstream protein gp27. GFP-gp26 could be expressed alone but was incapable of host recognition. By combining size-exclusion chromatography with fluorescence microscopy, we reveal how gp27 is not a component of the final RBP complex but instead is identified as a new type of phage-encoded intermolecular chaperone that is essential for maturation of the gp26 RBP.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1201301703
Document Type :
Electronic Resource