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Bacteriophages playing nice: Lysogenic bacteriophage replication stable in the human gut microbiota

Steven G. Sutcliffe, Alejandro Reyes, Corinne F. Maurice

2023iScience59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacteriophages, viruses specific to bacteria, coexist with their bacterial hosts with limited diversity fluctuations in the guts of healthy individuals where they replicate mostly via lysogenic replication. This favors 'piggy-back-the-winner' over 'kill-the-winner' dynamics which are driven by lytic bacteriophage replication. Revisiting the deep-viral sequencing data of a healthy individual sampled over 2.4 years, we explore how these dynamics occur. Prophages found in assembled bacterial metagenomes were also found extra-cellularly, as induced phage particles (iPPs), likely derived from prophage activation. These iPPs were diverse and continually present in low abundance, relative to the highly abundant but less diverse lytic phage population. The continuous detection of low levels of iPPs suggests that spontaneous induction regularly occurs in this healthy individual, possibly allowing prophages to maintain their ability to replicate and avoiding degradation and loss from the gut microbiota.

Topics & Concepts

ProphageLysogenic cycleLytic cycleBacteriophageBiologyReplicateViral replicationPopulationMicrobiomeMicrobiologyGeneticsVirusGeneEscherichia coliMedicineMathematicsEnvironmental healthStatisticsBacteriophages and microbial interactionsGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesPlant Virus Research Studies
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