Horizontal Gene Transfer and CRISPR Targeting Drive Phage-Bacterial Host Interactions and Coevolution in “Pink Berry” Marine Microbial Aggregates
James C. Kosmopoulos, Danielle E. Campbell, Rachel J. Whitaker, Elizabeth G. Wilbanks
Abstract
Phages, which are viruses that infect bacteria, are important components of all microbial systems, in which they drive the turnover of organic matter by lysing host cells, facilitate horizontal gene transfer (HGT), and coevolve with their bacterial hosts. Bacteria resist phage infection, which is often costly or lethal, through a diversity of mechanisms. One of these mechanisms is CRISPR systems, which encode arrays of phage-derived sequences from past infections to block subsequent infection with related phages. Here, we investigate the bacteria and phage populations from a simple marine microbial community, known as "pink berries", found in salt marshes of Falmouth, Massachusetts, as a model of phage-host coevolution. We identify eight novel phages and characterize a case of putative CRISPR-driven phage evolution as well as an instance of HGT between a phage and its host, together suggesting that phages have large evolutionary impacts in a naturally occurring microbial community.