Host genetic requirements for DNA release of lactococcal phage TP901 ‐1

Archive ouverte

Ruiz-Cruz, Sofía | Erazo Garzon, Andrea | Kelleher, Philip | Bottacini, Francesca | Breum, Solvej Østergaard | Neve, Horst | Heller, Knut | Vogensen, Finn | Palussière, Simon | Courtin, Pascal | Chapot-Chartier, Marie‐pierre | Vinogradov, Evgeny | Sadovskaya, Irina | Mahony, Jennifer | van Sinderen, Douwe

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. The first step in phage infection is the recognition of, and adsorption to, a receptor located on the host cell surface. This reversible host adsorption step is commonly followed by an irreversible event, which involves phage DNA delivery or release into the bacterial cytoplasm. The molecular components that trigger this latter event are unknown for most phages of Gram-positive bacteria. In the current study, we present a comparative genome analysis of three mutants of Lactococcus cremoris 3107, which are resistant to the P335 group phage TP901-1 due to mutations that affect TP901-1 DNA release. Through genetic complementation and phage infection assays, a predicted lactococcal three-component glycosylation system (TGS) was shown to be required for TP901-1 infection. Major cell wall saccharidic components were analysed, but no differences were found. However, heterologous gene expression experiments indicate that this TGS is involved in the glucosylation of a cell envelope-associated component that triggers TP901-1 DNA release. To date, a saccharide modification has not been implicated in the DNA delivery process of a Gram-positive infecting phage.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Another brick in the wall: a rhamnan polysaccharide trapped inside peptidoglycan of Lactococcus lactis

Archive ouverte | Sadovskaya, Irina | CCSD

International audience. Polysaccharides are ubiquitous components of the Gram-positive bacterial cell wall. In Lactococcus lactis, a polysaccharide pellicle (PSP) forms a layer at the cell surface. The PSP structure...

The CWPS Rubik’s cube: Linking diversity of cell wall polysaccharide structures with the encoded biosynthetic machinery of selected Lactococcus lactis strains

Archive ouverte | Mahony, Jennifer | CCSD

International audience. The biosynthetic machinery for cell wall polysaccharide (CWPS) production in lactococci is encoded by a large gene cluster, designated cwps. This locus displays considerable variation among l...

A cell wall‐associated polysaccharide is required for bacteriophage adsorption to the Streptococcus thermophilus cell surface

Archive ouverte | Mcdonnell, Brian | CCSD

International audience. Streptococcus thermophilus strain ST64987 was exposed to a member of a recently discovered group of S. thermophilus phages (the 987 phage group), generating phageinsensitive mutants, which we...

Chargement des enrichissements...