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Cluster K mycobacteriophages: insights into the evolutionary origins of mycobacteriophage TM4
Authors:Pope Welkin H  Ferreira Christina M  Jacobs-Sera Deborah  Benjamin Robert C  Davis Ariangela J  DeJong Randall J  Elgin Sarah C R  Guilfoile Forrest R  Forsyth Mark H  Harris Alexander D  Harvey Samuel E  Hughes Lee E  Hynes Peter M  Jackson Arrykka S  Jalal Marilyn D  MacMurray Elizabeth A  Manley Coreen M  McDonough Molly J  Mosier Jordan L  Osterbann Larissa J  Rabinowitz Hannah S  Rhyan Corwin N  Russell Daniel A  Saha Margaret S  Shaffer Christopher D  Simon Stephanie E  Sims Erika F  Tovar Isabel G  Weisser Emilie G  Wertz John T  Weston-Hafer Kathleen A  Williamson Kurt E  Zhang Bo  Cresawn Steven G  Jain Paras
Affiliation:Pittsburgh Bacteriophage Institute and Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
Abstract:Five newly isolated mycobacteriophages--Angelica, CrimD, Adephagia, Anaya, and Pixie--have similar genomic architectures to mycobacteriophage TM4, a previously characterized phage that is widely used in mycobacterial genetics. The nucleotide sequence similarities warrant grouping these into Cluster K, with subdivision into three subclusters: K1, K2, and K3. Although the overall genome architectures of these phages are similar, TM4 appears to have lost at least two segments of its genome, a central region containing the integration apparatus, and a segment at the right end. This suggests that TM4 is a recent derivative of a temperate parent, resolving a long-standing conundrum about its biology, in that it was reportedly recovered from a lysogenic strain of Mycobacterium avium, but it is not capable of forming lysogens in any mycobacterial host. Like TM4, all of the Cluster K phages infect both fast- and slow-growing mycobacteria, and all of them--with the exception of TM4--form stable lysogens in both Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium tuberculosis; immunity assays show that all five of these phages share the same immune specificity. TM4 infects these lysogens suggesting that it was either derived from a heteroimmune temperate parent or that it has acquired a virulent phenotype. We have also characterized a widely-used conditionally replicating derivative of TM4 and identified mutations conferring the temperature-sensitive phenotype. All of the Cluster K phages contain a series of well conserved 13 bp repeats associated with the translation initiation sites of a subset of the genes; approximately one half of these contain an additional sequence feature composed of imperfectly conserved 17 bp inverted repeats separated by a variable spacer. The K1 phages integrate into the host tmRNA and the Cluster K phages represent potential new tools for the genetics of M. tuberculosis and related species.
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