Environmental T4-Family Bacteriophages Evolve to Escape Abortive Infection via Multiple Routes in a Bacterial Host Employing "Altruistic Suicide" through Type III Toxin-Antitoxin Systems

Abortive infection is an anti-phage mechanism employed by a bacterium to initiate its own death upon phage infection. This reduces, or eliminates, production of viral progeny and protects clonal siblings in the bacterial population by an act akin to an "altruistic suicide." Abortive infect...

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Published inFrontiers in microbiology Vol. 8; p. 1006
Main Authors Chen, Bihe, Akusobi, Chidiebere, Fang, Xinzhe, Salmond, George P C
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 31.05.2017
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Summary:Abortive infection is an anti-phage mechanism employed by a bacterium to initiate its own death upon phage infection. This reduces, or eliminates, production of viral progeny and protects clonal siblings in the bacterial population by an act akin to an "altruistic suicide." Abortive infection can be mediated by a Type III toxin-antitoxin system called ToxIN consisting of an endoribonuclease toxin and RNA antitoxin. ToxIN is a heterohexameric quaternary complex in which pseudoknotted RNA inhibits the toxicity of the toxin until infection by certain phages causes destabilization of ToxIN , leading to bacteriostasis and, eventually, lethality. However, it is still unknown why only certain phages are able to activate ToxIN . To try to address this issue we first introduced ToxIN into the Gram-negative enterobacterium, sp. ATCC 39006 ( 39006) and then isolated new environmental 39006 phages that were scored for activation of ToxIN and abortive infection capacity. We isolated three T4-like phages from a sewage treatment outflow point into the River Cam, each phage being isolated at least a year apart. These phages were susceptible to ToxIN -mediated abortive infection but produced spontaneous "escape" mutants that were insensitive to ToxIN . Analysis of these resistant mutants revealed three different routes of escaping ToxIN , namely by mutating (the product of which is a phage transcriptional co-activator); by mutating a conserved, yet functionally unknown, ; or by deleting a 6.5-10 kb region of the phage genome. Analysis of these evolved escape mutants may help uncover the nature of the corresponding phage product(s) involved in activation of ToxIN .
Bibliography:Edited by: William Michael McShan, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, United States
Reviewed by: Robert Czajkowski, University of Gdańsk, Poland; Scott Van Nguyen, Agricultural Research Service (USDA), United States
This article was submitted to Virology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Microbiology
Present Address: Chidiebere Akusobi, Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA
ISSN:1664-302X
1664-302X
DOI:10.3389/fmicb.2017.01006