Viruses (Jul 2022)

Morphological and Genetic Characterization of <i>Eggerthella lenta</i> Bacteriophage PMBT5

  • Sabrina Sprotte,
  • Torben S. Rasmussen,
  • Gyu-Sung Cho,
  • Erik Brinks,
  • René Lametsch,
  • Horst Neve,
  • Finn K. Vogensen,
  • Dennis S. Nielsen,
  • Charles M. A. P. Franz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v14081598
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. 1598

Abstract

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Eggerthella lenta is a common member of the human gut microbiome. We here describe the isolation and characterization of a putative virulent bacteriophage having E. lenta as host. The double-layer agar method for isolating phages was adapted to anaerobic conditions for isolating bacteriophage PMBT5 from sewage on a strictly anaerobic E. lenta strain of intestinal origin. For this, anaerobically grown E. lenta cells were concentrated by centrifugation and used for a 24 h phage enrichment step. Subsequently, this suspension was added to anaerobically prepared top (soft) agar in Hungate tubes and further used in the double-layer agar method. Based on morphological characteristics observed by transmission electron microscopy, phage PMBT5 could be assigned to the Siphoviridae phage family. It showed an isometric head with a flexible, noncontractile tail and a distinct single 45 nm tail fiber under the baseplate. Genome sequencing and assembly resulted in one contig of 30,930 bp and a mol% GC content of 51.3, consisting of 44 predicted protein-encoding genes. Phage-related proteins could be largely identified based on their amino acid sequence, and a comparison with metagenomes in the human virome database showed that the phage genome exhibits similarity to two distantly related phages.

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