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Resurrection of a global, metagenomically defined gokushovirus

Paul C. Kirchberger, Howard Ochman

2020eLife41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Gokushoviruses are single-stranded, circular DNA bacteriophages found in metagenomic datasets from diverse ecosystems worldwide, including human gut microbiomes. Despite their ubiquity and abundance, little is known about their biology or host range: Isolates are exceedingly rare, known only from three obligate intracellular bacterial genera. By synthesizing circularized phage genomes from prophages embedded in diverse enteric bacteria, we produced gokushoviruses in an experimentally tractable model system, allowing us to investigate their features and biology. We demonstrate that virions can reliably infect and lysogenize hosts by hijacking a conserved chromosome-dimer resolution system. Sequence motifs required for lysogeny are detectable in other metagenomically defined gokushoviruses; however, we show that even partial motifs enable phages to persist cytoplasmically without leading to collapse of their host culture. This ability to employ multiple, disparate survival strategies is likely key to the long-term persistence and global distribution of Gokushovirinae.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyProphageLysogenic cycleMetagenomicsGenomeComputational biologyMicrobiomeCRISPRSystems biologyObligateGeneticsCircular bacterial chromosomeEvolutionary biologyBacteriophageEscherichia coliGeneEcologyBacteriophages and microbial interactionsViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyPlant Virus Research Studies
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