AI Article Synopsis

  • The text discusses the dual nature of certain bacteria that colonize mammalian nasal cavities but can also cause severe infections, highlighting the role of Sa3 phages found in human strains.
  • It emphasizes the importance of specific phage life cycles in different bacterial strains, classifying them into low and high transfer strains based on their ability to replicate phages.
  • The study concludes that the genetic characteristics of the bacterial hosts influence the interactions with phages, which could affect the rate of adaptation and mobilization of bacteria in response to phage presence.

Article Abstract

asymptomatically colonizes the nasal cavity of mammals, but it is also a leading cause of life-threatening infections. Most human nasal isolates carry Sa3 phages, which integrate into the bacterial gene encoding a sphingomyelinase. The virulence factor-encoding genes carried by the Sa3-phages are highly human-specific, and most animal strains are Sa3 negative. Thus, both insertion and excision of the prophage could potentially confer a fitness advantage to . Here, we analyzed the phage life cycle of two Sa3 phages, Φ13 and ΦN315, in different phage-cured strains. Based on phage transfer experiments, strains could be classified into low (8325-4, SH1000, and USA300c) and high (MW2c and Newman-c) transfer strains. High-transfer strains promoted the replication of phages, whereas phage adsorption, integration, excision, or transcription was not significantly different between strains. RNASeq analyses of replication-deficient lysogens revealed no strain-specific differences in the CI/Mor regulatory switch. However, lytic genes were significantly upregulated in the high transfer strain MW2c Φ13 compared to strain 8325-4 Φ13. By transcriptional start site prediction, new promoter regions within the lytic modules were identified, which are likely targeted by specific host factors. Such host-phage interaction probably accounts for the strain-specific differences in phage replication and transfer frequency. Thus, the genetic makeup of the host strains may determine the rate of phage mobilization, a feature that might impact the speed at which certain strains can achieve host adaptation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9694928PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14112471DOI Listing

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