Induction and Genomic Analysis of a Lysogenic Phage of Hafnia paralvei.

Curr Microbiol

Key Laboratory of Marine Biotechnology, School of Marine Sciences, Ningbo University, Ningbo, 315832, People's Republic of China.

Published: January 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hafnia paralvei is a bacterium linked to zoonotic diseases, and no prior research has been conducted on its prophage.
  • A novel phage called Hafnia phage yong1 was identified from pathogenic H. paralvei, exhibiting Myoviridae-like features with a distinct morphology and a fully sequenced genome of 43,329 bp.
  • The genome analysis suggests a strong relationship with prophages from other bacteria, and it uniquely contains genes related to lysogenic processes, marking Hafnia phage yong1 as the first of its kind to showcase these contiguous genes.

Article Abstract

Hafnia paralvei is a bacterium that can cause zoonoses. No research has been reported on H. paralvei prophage. In this study, a Hafnia phage yong1 was induced from pathogenic H. paralvei LY-23 by mitomycin C. The phage showed a Myoviridae-like morphology having a hexagonal head of approximately 65 nm in diameter and a contractile tail of approximately 95 nm in length and 17 nm in width. Its genome was sequenced by using the Illumina Miseq platform. The complete genome of Hafnia phage yong1 is 43,329 bp with a G + C content of 47.65%. BLASTn analysis revealed that Hafnia phage yong1 had the highest sequence similarity with the predicted prophages of Enterobacter chengduensis strain WCHECl-C4 = WCHECh050004 recovered from a human blood sample and Escherichia coli strain L103-2 recovered from a goose farm in China. Hafnia phage yong1 contains a tRNA gene and 76 predicted open reading frames, 33 of which were annotated. Gene strings similar to the bacteriophage λ cro-cI-rexA-rexB operon conferring Imm and Rex to lysogenic cells were found in Hafnia phage yong1 genome. Hafnia phage yong1 is the first Myoviridae-like phage found to contain such contiguous genes. Hafnia phage yong1 formed an independent branch between two families, Chaseviridae and Drexlerviridae, in the Proteomic tree.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00284-021-02698-0DOI Listing

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