Huanglongbing disease (HLB; yellow shoot disease) is a severe worldwide infectious disease for citrus family plants. The pathogen " Liberibacter asiaticus" is an alphaproteobacterium of the family that has been identified as the causative agent of HLB. The virulence of " Liberibacter asiaticus" has been attributed, in part, to prophage-carried genes. Prophage and prophage-like elements have been identified in 12 of the 15 available " Liberibacter asiaticus" genomes and are classified into three prophage types. Here, we reexamined all 15 " Liberibacter asiaticus" genomes using a prediction approach and expanded the number of prophage-like elements from 16 to 33. Further, we found that all of the " Liberibacter asiaticus" genomes contained at least one prophage-like sequence. Comparative analysis revealed a prevalent, albeit previously unknown, prophage-like sequence type that is a remnant of an integrated prophage. Notably, this remnant prophage is found in the Ishi-1 " Liberibacter asiaticus" strain that had previously been reported as lacking prophages. Our findings provide both a resource for data and new insights into the evolutionary relationship between phage and " Liberibacter asiaticus" pathogenicity. Huanglongbing (HLB) disease is threatening citrus production worldwide. The causative agent is " Liberibacter asiaticus." Prior work using mapping-based approaches identified prophage-like sequences in some " Liberibacter asiaticus" genomes but not all. Here, we utilized a approach that expands the number of prophage-like elements found in " Liberibacter asiaticus" from 16 to 33 and identified at least one prophage-like sequence in all " Liberibacter asiaticus" strains. Furthermore, we identified a prophage-like sequence type that is a remnant of an integrated prophage-expanding the number of prophage types in " Liberibacter asiaticus" from 3 to 4. Overall, the findings will help researchers investigate the role of prophage in the ecology, evolution, and pathogenicity of " Liberibacter asiaticus."

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6854039PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00409-19DOI Listing

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