Isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, a crAss-like phage from the human gut that infects Bacteroides xylanisolvens
Abstract Background The gut phageome comprises a complex phage community of thousands of individual strains, with a few highly abundant bacteriophages. CrAss-like phages, which infect bacteria of the order Bacteroidales, are the most abundant bacteriophage family in the human gut and make an importa...
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doaj-e17628296cce4fae823ba81a881977132021-04-18T11:46:55ZengBMCMicrobiome2049-26182021-04-019112110.1186/s40168-021-01036-7Isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, a crAss-like phage from the human gut that infects Bacteroides xylanisolvensEmma Guerin0Andrey N. Shkoporov1Stephen R. Stockdale2Joan Colom Comas3Ekaterina V. Khokhlova4Adam G. Clooney5Karen M. Daly6Lorraine A. Draper7Niamh Stephens8Dimitri Scholz9R. Paul Ross10Colin Hill11APC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkAPC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkAPC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkAPC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkAPC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkAPC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkAPC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkAPC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkConway Institute of Biomolecular and Biomedical Research, University College DublinConway Institute of Biomolecular and Biomedical Research, University College DublinAPC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkAPC Microbiome Ireland, University College CorkAbstract Background The gut phageome comprises a complex phage community of thousands of individual strains, with a few highly abundant bacteriophages. CrAss-like phages, which infect bacteria of the order Bacteroidales, are the most abundant bacteriophage family in the human gut and make an important contribution to an individual’s core virome. Based on metagenomic data, crAss-like phages form a family, with four sub-families and ten candidate genera. To date, only three representatives isolated in pure culture have been reported: ΦcrAss001 and two closely related phages DAC15 and DAC17; all are members of the less abundant candidate genus VI. The persistence at high levels of both crAss-like phage and their Bacteroidales hosts in the human gut has not been explained mechanistically, and this phage-host relationship can only be properly studied with isolated phage-host pairs from as many genera as possible. Results Faeces from a healthy donor with high levels of crAss-like phage was used to initiate a faecal fermentation in a chemostat, with selected antibiotics chosen to inhibit rapidly growing bacteria and selectively enrich for Gram-negative Bacteroidales. This had the objective of promoting the simultaneous expansion of crAss-like phages on their native hosts. The levels of seven different crAss-like phages expanded during the fermentation, indicating that their hosts were also present in the fermenter. The enriched supernatant was then tested against individual Bacteroidales strains isolated from the same faecal sample. This resulted in the isolation of a previously uncharacterised crAss-like phage of candidate genus IV of the proposed Alphacrassvirinae sub-family, ΦcrAss002, that infects the gut commensal Bacteroides xylanisolvens. ΦcrAss002 does not form plaques or spots on lawns of sensitive cells, nor does it lyse liquid cultures, even at high titres. In keeping with the co-abundance of phage and host in the human gut, ΦcrAss002 and Bacteroides xylanisolvens can also co-exist at high levels when co-cultured in laboratory media. Conclusions We report the isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, the first representative of the proposed Alphacrassvirinae sub-family of crAss-like phages. ΦcrAss002 cannot form plaques or spots on bacterial lawns but can co-exist with its host, Bacteroides xylanisolvens, at very high levels in liquid culture without impacting on bacterial numbers. Video abstracthttps://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-021-01036-7BacteriophagescrAssphagecrAss-like phagesHuman gut phageomeHuman microbiomePhage-host interactions |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Emma Guerin Andrey N. Shkoporov Stephen R. Stockdale Joan Colom Comas Ekaterina V. Khokhlova Adam G. Clooney Karen M. Daly Lorraine A. Draper Niamh Stephens Dimitri Scholz R. Paul Ross Colin Hill |
spellingShingle |
Emma Guerin Andrey N. Shkoporov Stephen R. Stockdale Joan Colom Comas Ekaterina V. Khokhlova Adam G. Clooney Karen M. Daly Lorraine A. Draper Niamh Stephens Dimitri Scholz R. Paul Ross Colin Hill Isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, a crAss-like phage from the human gut that infects Bacteroides xylanisolvens Microbiome Bacteriophages crAssphage crAss-like phages Human gut phageome Human microbiome Phage-host interactions |
author_facet |
Emma Guerin Andrey N. Shkoporov Stephen R. Stockdale Joan Colom Comas Ekaterina V. Khokhlova Adam G. Clooney Karen M. Daly Lorraine A. Draper Niamh Stephens Dimitri Scholz R. Paul Ross Colin Hill |
author_sort |
Emma Guerin |
title |
Isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, a crAss-like phage from the human gut that infects Bacteroides xylanisolvens |
title_short |
Isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, a crAss-like phage from the human gut that infects Bacteroides xylanisolvens |
title_full |
Isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, a crAss-like phage from the human gut that infects Bacteroides xylanisolvens |
title_fullStr |
Isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, a crAss-like phage from the human gut that infects Bacteroides xylanisolvens |
title_full_unstemmed |
Isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, a crAss-like phage from the human gut that infects Bacteroides xylanisolvens |
title_sort |
isolation and characterisation of φcrass002, a crass-like phage from the human gut that infects bacteroides xylanisolvens |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
Microbiome |
issn |
2049-2618 |
publishDate |
2021-04-01 |
description |
Abstract Background The gut phageome comprises a complex phage community of thousands of individual strains, with a few highly abundant bacteriophages. CrAss-like phages, which infect bacteria of the order Bacteroidales, are the most abundant bacteriophage family in the human gut and make an important contribution to an individual’s core virome. Based on metagenomic data, crAss-like phages form a family, with four sub-families and ten candidate genera. To date, only three representatives isolated in pure culture have been reported: ΦcrAss001 and two closely related phages DAC15 and DAC17; all are members of the less abundant candidate genus VI. The persistence at high levels of both crAss-like phage and their Bacteroidales hosts in the human gut has not been explained mechanistically, and this phage-host relationship can only be properly studied with isolated phage-host pairs from as many genera as possible. Results Faeces from a healthy donor with high levels of crAss-like phage was used to initiate a faecal fermentation in a chemostat, with selected antibiotics chosen to inhibit rapidly growing bacteria and selectively enrich for Gram-negative Bacteroidales. This had the objective of promoting the simultaneous expansion of crAss-like phages on their native hosts. The levels of seven different crAss-like phages expanded during the fermentation, indicating that their hosts were also present in the fermenter. The enriched supernatant was then tested against individual Bacteroidales strains isolated from the same faecal sample. This resulted in the isolation of a previously uncharacterised crAss-like phage of candidate genus IV of the proposed Alphacrassvirinae sub-family, ΦcrAss002, that infects the gut commensal Bacteroides xylanisolvens. ΦcrAss002 does not form plaques or spots on lawns of sensitive cells, nor does it lyse liquid cultures, even at high titres. In keeping with the co-abundance of phage and host in the human gut, ΦcrAss002 and Bacteroides xylanisolvens can also co-exist at high levels when co-cultured in laboratory media. Conclusions We report the isolation and characterisation of ΦcrAss002, the first representative of the proposed Alphacrassvirinae sub-family of crAss-like phages. ΦcrAss002 cannot form plaques or spots on bacterial lawns but can co-exist with its host, Bacteroides xylanisolvens, at very high levels in liquid culture without impacting on bacterial numbers. Video abstract |
topic |
Bacteriophages crAssphage crAss-like phages Human gut phageome Human microbiome Phage-host interactions |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-021-01036-7 |
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