Defining the human gut host–phage network through single-cell viral tagging

Viral discovery is accelerating at an unprecedented rate due to continuing advances in culture-independent sequence-based analyses. One important facet of this discovery is identification of the hosts of these recently characterized uncultured viruses. To this end, we have adapted the viral tagging...

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Published inNature microbiology Vol. 4; no. 12; pp. 2192 - 2203
Main Authors Džunková, Mária, Low, Soo Jen, Daly, Joshua N., Deng, Li, Rinke, Christian, Hugenholtz, Philip
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 01.12.2019
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:Viral discovery is accelerating at an unprecedented rate due to continuing advances in culture-independent sequence-based analyses. One important facet of this discovery is identification of the hosts of these recently characterized uncultured viruses. To this end, we have adapted the viral tagging approach, which bypasses the need for culture-based methods to identify host–phage pairings. Fluorescently labelled anonymous virions adsorb to unlabelled anonymous bacterial host cells, which are then individually sorted as host–phage pairs, followed by genome amplification and high-throughput sequencing to establish the identities of both the host and the attached virus(es). We demonstrate single-cell viral tagging using the faecal microbiome, including cross-tagging of viruses and bacteria between human subjects. A total of 363 unique host–phage pairings were predicted, most of which were subject-specific and involved previously uncharacterized viruses despite the majority of their bacterial hosts having known taxonomy. One-fifth of these pairs were confirmed by multiple individual tagged cells. Viruses targeting more than one bacterial species were conspicuously absent in the host–phage network, suggesting that phages are not major vectors of inter-species horizontal gene transfer in the human gut. A high level of cross-reactivity between phages and bacteria from different subjects was noted despite subject-specific viral profiles, which has implications for faecal microbiota transplant therapy. Single-cell viral tagging was used to identify uncharacterized bacterial host–phage pairs present in the human faecal microbiome, revealing a lack of phages targeting more than one host species and a high level of cross-reactivity between hosts and phages from different subjects, despite subject-specific pairings, which could have implications for faecal microbiota transplants.
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ISSN:2058-5276
2058-5276
DOI:10.1038/s41564-019-0526-2