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Evolutionary Sweeps of Subviral Parasites and Their Phage Host Bring Unique Parasite Variants and Disappearance of a Phage CRISPR-Cas System

Vibrio cholerae is a significant threat to global public health in part due to its propensity for large-scale evolutionary sweeps where lineages emerge and are replaced. These sweeps may originate from the Bay of Bengal, where bacteriophage predation and the evolution of antiphage counterdefenses is...

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Autores principales: Angermeyer, Angus, Hays, Stephanie G., Nguyen, Maria H. T., Johura, Fatema-tuz, Sultana, Marzia, Alam, Munirul, Seed, Kimberley D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8844924/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35164562
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03088-21
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author Angermeyer, Angus
Hays, Stephanie G.
Nguyen, Maria H. T.
Johura, Fatema-tuz
Sultana, Marzia
Alam, Munirul
Seed, Kimberley D.
author_facet Angermeyer, Angus
Hays, Stephanie G.
Nguyen, Maria H. T.
Johura, Fatema-tuz
Sultana, Marzia
Alam, Munirul
Seed, Kimberley D.
author_sort Angermeyer, Angus
collection PubMed
description Vibrio cholerae is a significant threat to global public health in part due to its propensity for large-scale evolutionary sweeps where lineages emerge and are replaced. These sweeps may originate from the Bay of Bengal, where bacteriophage predation and the evolution of antiphage counterdefenses is a recurring theme. The bacteriophage ICP1 is a key predator of epidemic V. cholerae and is notable for acquiring a CRISPR-Cas system to combat PLE, a defensive subviral parasite encoded by its V. cholerae host. Here, we describe the discovery of four previously unknown PLE variants through a retrospective analysis of >3,000 publicly available sequences as well as one additional variant (PLE10) from recent surveillance of cholera patients in Bangladesh. In recent sampling we also observed a lineage sweep of PLE-negative V. cholerae occurring within the patient population in under a year. This shift coincided with a loss of ICP1’s CRISPR-Cas system in favor of a previously prevalent PLE-targeting endonuclease called Odn. Interestingly, PLE10 was resistant to ICP1-encoded Odn, yet it was not found in any recent V. cholerae strains. We also identified isolates from within individual patient samples that revealed both mixed PLE(+)/PLE(−) V. cholerae populations and ICP1 strains possessing CRISPR-Cas or Odn with evidence of in situ recombination. These findings reinforce our understanding of the successive nature of V. cholerae evolution and suggest that ongoing surveillance of V. cholerae, ICP1, and PLE in Bangladesh is important for tracking genetic developments relevant to pandemic cholera that can occur over relatively short timescales.
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spelling pubmed-88449242022-02-17 Evolutionary Sweeps of Subviral Parasites and Their Phage Host Bring Unique Parasite Variants and Disappearance of a Phage CRISPR-Cas System Angermeyer, Angus Hays, Stephanie G. Nguyen, Maria H. T. Johura, Fatema-tuz Sultana, Marzia Alam, Munirul Seed, Kimberley D. mBio Research Article Vibrio cholerae is a significant threat to global public health in part due to its propensity for large-scale evolutionary sweeps where lineages emerge and are replaced. These sweeps may originate from the Bay of Bengal, where bacteriophage predation and the evolution of antiphage counterdefenses is a recurring theme. The bacteriophage ICP1 is a key predator of epidemic V. cholerae and is notable for acquiring a CRISPR-Cas system to combat PLE, a defensive subviral parasite encoded by its V. cholerae host. Here, we describe the discovery of four previously unknown PLE variants through a retrospective analysis of >3,000 publicly available sequences as well as one additional variant (PLE10) from recent surveillance of cholera patients in Bangladesh. In recent sampling we also observed a lineage sweep of PLE-negative V. cholerae occurring within the patient population in under a year. This shift coincided with a loss of ICP1’s CRISPR-Cas system in favor of a previously prevalent PLE-targeting endonuclease called Odn. Interestingly, PLE10 was resistant to ICP1-encoded Odn, yet it was not found in any recent V. cholerae strains. We also identified isolates from within individual patient samples that revealed both mixed PLE(+)/PLE(−) V. cholerae populations and ICP1 strains possessing CRISPR-Cas or Odn with evidence of in situ recombination. These findings reinforce our understanding of the successive nature of V. cholerae evolution and suggest that ongoing surveillance of V. cholerae, ICP1, and PLE in Bangladesh is important for tracking genetic developments relevant to pandemic cholera that can occur over relatively short timescales. American Society for Microbiology 2022-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC8844924/ /pubmed/35164562 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03088-21 Text en Copyright © 2022 Angermeyer 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
Angermeyer, Angus
Hays, Stephanie G.
Nguyen, Maria H. T.
Johura, Fatema-tuz
Sultana, Marzia
Alam, Munirul
Seed, Kimberley D.
Evolutionary Sweeps of Subviral Parasites and Their Phage Host Bring Unique Parasite Variants and Disappearance of a Phage CRISPR-Cas System
title Evolutionary Sweeps of Subviral Parasites and Their Phage Host Bring Unique Parasite Variants and Disappearance of a Phage CRISPR-Cas System
title_full Evolutionary Sweeps of Subviral Parasites and Their Phage Host Bring Unique Parasite Variants and Disappearance of a Phage CRISPR-Cas System
title_fullStr Evolutionary Sweeps of Subviral Parasites and Their Phage Host Bring Unique Parasite Variants and Disappearance of a Phage CRISPR-Cas System
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary Sweeps of Subviral Parasites and Their Phage Host Bring Unique Parasite Variants and Disappearance of a Phage CRISPR-Cas System
title_short Evolutionary Sweeps of Subviral Parasites and Their Phage Host Bring Unique Parasite Variants and Disappearance of a Phage CRISPR-Cas System
title_sort evolutionary sweeps of subviral parasites and their phage host bring unique parasite variants and disappearance of a phage crispr-cas system
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8844924/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35164562
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03088-21
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