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Genomic diversity and biogeographic distributions of a novel lineage of bacteriophages that infect marine OM43 bacteria

The marine methylotrophic OM43 clade is considered an important bacterial group in coastal microbial communities. OM43 bacteria, which are closely related to phytoplankton blooms, have small cell sizes and streamlined genomes. Bacteriophages profoundly shape the evolutionary trajectories, population...

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Autores principales: Yang, Mingyu, Du, Sen, Zhang, Zefeng, Xia, Qian, Liu, He, Qin, Fang, Wu, Zuqing, Ying, Hanqi, Wu, Yin, Shao, Jiabing, Zhao, Yanlin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10580990/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37607063
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04942-22
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author Yang, Mingyu
Du, Sen
Zhang, Zefeng
Xia, Qian
Liu, He
Qin, Fang
Wu, Zuqing
Ying, Hanqi
Wu, Yin
Shao, Jiabing
Zhao, Yanlin
author_facet Yang, Mingyu
Du, Sen
Zhang, Zefeng
Xia, Qian
Liu, He
Qin, Fang
Wu, Zuqing
Ying, Hanqi
Wu, Yin
Shao, Jiabing
Zhao, Yanlin
author_sort Yang, Mingyu
collection PubMed
description The marine methylotrophic OM43 clade is considered an important bacterial group in coastal microbial communities. OM43 bacteria, which are closely related to phytoplankton blooms, have small cell sizes and streamlined genomes. Bacteriophages profoundly shape the evolutionary trajectories, population dynamics, and physiology of microbes. The prevalence and diversity of several phages that infect OM43 bacteria have been reported. In this study, we isolated and sequenced two novel OM43 phages, MEP401 and MEP402. These phages share 90% of their open reading frames (ORFs) and are distinct from other known phage isolates. Furthermore, a total of 99 metagenomic viral genomes (MVGs) closely related to MEP401 and MEP402 were identified. Phylogenomic analyses suggest that MEP401, MEP402, and these identified MVGs belong to a novel subfamily in the family Zobellviridae and that they can be separated into two groups. Group I MVGs show conserved whole-genome synteny with MEP401, while group II MVGs possess the MEP401-type DNA replication module and a distinct type of morphogenesis and packaging module, suggesting that genomic recombination occurred between phages. Most members in these two groups were predicted to infect OM43 bacteria. Metagenomic read-mapping analysis revealed that the phages in these two groups are globally ubiquitous and display distinct biogeographic distributions, with some phages being predominant in cold regions, some exclusively detected in estuarine stations, and others displaying wider distributions. This study expands our knowledge of the diversity and ecology of a novel phage lineage that infects OM43 bacteria by describing their genomic diversity and global distribution patterns. IMPORTANCE: OM43 phages that infect marine OM43 bacteria are important for host mortality, community structure, and physiological functions. In this study, two OM43 phages were isolated and characterized. Metagenomic viral genome (MVG) retrieval using these two OM43 phages as baits led to the identification of two phage groups of a new subfamily in the family Zobellviridae. We found that group I MVGs share similar genomic content and arrangement with MEP401 and MEP402, whereas group II MVGs only possess the MEP401-type DNA replication module. Metagenomic mapping analysis suggests that members in these two groups are globally ubiquitous with distinct distribution patterns. This study provides important insights into the genomic diversity and biogeography of the OM43 phages in the global ocean.
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spelling pubmed-105809902023-10-18 Genomic diversity and biogeographic distributions of a novel lineage of bacteriophages that infect marine OM43 bacteria Yang, Mingyu Du, Sen Zhang, Zefeng Xia, Qian Liu, He Qin, Fang Wu, Zuqing Ying, Hanqi Wu, Yin Shao, Jiabing Zhao, Yanlin Microbiol Spectr Research Article The marine methylotrophic OM43 clade is considered an important bacterial group in coastal microbial communities. OM43 bacteria, which are closely related to phytoplankton blooms, have small cell sizes and streamlined genomes. Bacteriophages profoundly shape the evolutionary trajectories, population dynamics, and physiology of microbes. The prevalence and diversity of several phages that infect OM43 bacteria have been reported. In this study, we isolated and sequenced two novel OM43 phages, MEP401 and MEP402. These phages share 90% of their open reading frames (ORFs) and are distinct from other known phage isolates. Furthermore, a total of 99 metagenomic viral genomes (MVGs) closely related to MEP401 and MEP402 were identified. Phylogenomic analyses suggest that MEP401, MEP402, and these identified MVGs belong to a novel subfamily in the family Zobellviridae and that they can be separated into two groups. Group I MVGs show conserved whole-genome synteny with MEP401, while group II MVGs possess the MEP401-type DNA replication module and a distinct type of morphogenesis and packaging module, suggesting that genomic recombination occurred between phages. Most members in these two groups were predicted to infect OM43 bacteria. Metagenomic read-mapping analysis revealed that the phages in these two groups are globally ubiquitous and display distinct biogeographic distributions, with some phages being predominant in cold regions, some exclusively detected in estuarine stations, and others displaying wider distributions. This study expands our knowledge of the diversity and ecology of a novel phage lineage that infects OM43 bacteria by describing their genomic diversity and global distribution patterns. IMPORTANCE: OM43 phages that infect marine OM43 bacteria are important for host mortality, community structure, and physiological functions. In this study, two OM43 phages were isolated and characterized. Metagenomic viral genome (MVG) retrieval using these two OM43 phages as baits led to the identification of two phage groups of a new subfamily in the family Zobellviridae. We found that group I MVGs share similar genomic content and arrangement with MEP401 and MEP402, whereas group II MVGs only possess the MEP401-type DNA replication module. Metagenomic mapping analysis suggests that members in these two groups are globally ubiquitous with distinct distribution patterns. This study provides important insights into the genomic diversity and biogeography of the OM43 phages in the global ocean. American Society for Microbiology 2023-08-21 /pmc/articles/PMC10580990/ /pubmed/37607063 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04942-22 Text en Copyright © 2023 Yang et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Yang, Mingyu
Du, Sen
Zhang, Zefeng
Xia, Qian
Liu, He
Qin, Fang
Wu, Zuqing
Ying, Hanqi
Wu, Yin
Shao, Jiabing
Zhao, Yanlin
Genomic diversity and biogeographic distributions of a novel lineage of bacteriophages that infect marine OM43 bacteria
title Genomic diversity and biogeographic distributions of a novel lineage of bacteriophages that infect marine OM43 bacteria
title_full Genomic diversity and biogeographic distributions of a novel lineage of bacteriophages that infect marine OM43 bacteria
title_fullStr Genomic diversity and biogeographic distributions of a novel lineage of bacteriophages that infect marine OM43 bacteria
title_full_unstemmed Genomic diversity and biogeographic distributions of a novel lineage of bacteriophages that infect marine OM43 bacteria
title_short Genomic diversity and biogeographic distributions of a novel lineage of bacteriophages that infect marine OM43 bacteria
title_sort genomic diversity and biogeographic distributions of a novel lineage of bacteriophages that infect marine om43 bacteria
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10580990/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37607063
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04942-22
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