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- Title
Phylogenetic relationships and codon usage bias amongst cluster K mycobacteriophages.
- Authors
Crane, Adele; Versoza, Cyril J.; Hua, Tiana; Kapoor, Rohan; Lloyd, Lillian; Mehta, Rithik; Menolascino, Jueliet; Morais, Abraham; Munig, Saige; Patel, Zeel; Sackett, Daniel; Schmit, Brandon; Sy, Makena; Pfeifer, Susanne P.
- Abstract
Bacteriophages infecting pathogenic hosts play an important role in medical research, not only as potential treatments for antibioticresistant infections but also offering novel insights into pathogen genetics and evolution. A prominent example is cluster K mycobacteriophages infecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis, a causative agent of tuberculosis in humans. However, as handling M. tuberculosis as well as other pathogens in a laboratory remains challenging, alternative nonpathogenic relatives, such as Mycobacterium smegmatis, are frequently used as surrogates to discover therapeutically relevant bacteriophages in a safer environment. Consequently, the individual host ranges of the majority of cluster K mycobacteriophages identified to date remain poorly understood. Here, we characterized the complete genome of Stinson, a temperate subcluster K1 mycobacteriophage with a siphoviral morphology. A series of comparative genomic analyses revealed strong similarities with other cluster K mycobacteriophages, including the conservation of an immunity repressor gene and a toxin/antitoxin gene pair. Patterns of codon usage bias across the cluster offered important insights into putative host ranges in nature, highlighting that although all cluster K mycobacteriophages are able to infect M. tuberculosis, they are less likely to have shared an evolutionary infection history with Mycobacterium leprae (underlying leprosy) compared to the rest of the genus' host species. Moreover, subcluster K1 mycobacteriophages are able to integrate into the genomes of Mycobacterium abscessus and Mycobacterium marinum-two bacteria causing pulmonary and cutaneous infections which are often difficult to treat due to their drug resistance.
- Subjects
MYCOBACTERIUM leprae; MYCOBACTERIUM smegmatis; MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis; GENOMICS; MEDICAL research; MYCOBACTERIAL diseases
- Publication
G3: Genes | Genomes | Genetics, 2021, Vol 11, Issue 11, p1
- ISSN
2160-1836
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/g3journal/jkab291