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1.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2793: 257-271, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38526735

ABSTRACT

We present here a CRISPR-interference-based protocol to trigger prophage induction, even for non-inducible prophages. This method can also be used to cure the prophage from the bacterial host. The method is based on silencing of the phage's repressor transcription, thanks to CRISPR interference. Plasmid electroporation is used to bring the CRISPRi system into the bacteria, specifically on a plasmid carrying spacers targeting the prophage repressor. This method enables prophage induction and curation in a week or two with a high efficiency.


Subject(s)
Lysogeny , Prophages , Prophages/genetics , Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats/genetics , Virus Activation , Plasmids/genetics
2.
FEMS Microbiol Rev ; 47(4)2023 07 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37353926

ABSTRACT

Over the past few decades, the interest in lactic acid bacteria (LAB) has been steadily growing. This is mainly due to their industrial use, their health benefits as probiotic bacteria and their ecological importance in host-related microbiota. Phage infection represents a significant risk for the production and industrial use of LAB. This created the need to study the various means of defense put in place by LAB to resist their viral enemies, as well as the countermeasures evolved by phages to overcome these defenses. In this review, we discuss defense systems that LAB employ to resist phage infections. We also describe how phages counter these mechanisms through diverse and sophisticated strategies. Furthermore, we discuss the way phage-host interactions shape each other's evolution. The recent discovery of numerous novel defense systems in other bacteria promises a new dawn for phage research in LAB.


Subject(s)
Bacteriophages , Lactobacillales , CRISPR-Cas Systems , Bacteria
3.
PLoS Pathog ; 19(2): e1011127, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36730457

ABSTRACT

Adherent-invasive Escherichia coli (AIEC) strains are frequently recovered from stools of patients with dysbiotic microbiota. They have remarkable properties of adherence to the intestinal epithelium, and survive better than other E. coli in macrophages. The best studied of these AIEC is probably strain LF82, which was isolated from a Crohn's disease patient. This strain contains five complete prophages, which have not been studied until now. We undertook their analysis, both in vitro and inside macrophages, and show that all of them form virions. The Gally prophage is by far the most active, generating spontaneously over 108 viral particles per mL of culture supernatants in vitro, more than 100-fold higher than the other phages. Gally is also over-induced after a genotoxic stress generated by ciprofloxacin and trimethoprim. However, upon macrophage infection, a genotoxic environment, this over-induction is not observed. Analysis of the transcriptome and key steps of its lytic cycle in macrophages suggests that the excision of the Gally prophage continues to be repressed in macrophages. We conclude that strain LF82 has evolved an efficient way to block the lytic cycle of its most active prophage upon macrophage infection, which may participate to its good survival in macrophages.


Subject(s)
Bacteriophages , Escherichia coli Infections , Humans , Escherichia coli , Macrophages , Intestinal Mucosa , Bacterial Adhesion
4.
Curr Opin Biotechnol ; 73: 308-313, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34653834

ABSTRACT

The importance of the gut microbiota in host health is now well established, but the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Among the animal models used to investigate microbiota-host interactions, the zebrafish (Danio renio) is gaining attention. Several factors contribute to the recent interest in this model, including its low cost, the ability to assess large cohorts, the possibility to obtain germ-free larvae from non-axenic parents, and the availability of optical methodologies to probe the transparent larvae and adults from various genetic lines. We review recent findings on the zebrafish gut microbiota and its modulation by exogenous microbes, nutrition, and environmental factors. We also highlight the potential of this model for assessing the impact of the gut microbiota on brain development.


Subject(s)
Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Animals , Larva , Models, Animal , Zebrafish
5.
CRISPR J ; 4(4): 549-557, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34406037

ABSTRACT

Prophages are widely spread among bacterial genomes, and they can have positive or negative effects on their hosts. A key aspect in the study of prophages is the discovery of their induction signals. Prophage induction can occur by inactivating a phage transcriptional repressor, which is responsible for maintaining the lysogenic state. This repressor can be inactivated through the bacterial SOS response. However, the induction signals for numerous prophages do not involve the SOS system, and therefore significant efforts are needed to identify these conditions. Similarly, curing bacterial strains of inducible prophages is a tedious process, requiring the screening of several colonies. Here, we investigated whether transcriptional silencing of a prophage repressor using CRISPR interference (CRISPRi) would lead to prophage induction. Using Escherichia coli phages λ and P2 as models, we demonstrated the efficiency of CRISPRi for prophage induction and for curing lysogenic strains of their prophages.


Subject(s)
CRISPR-Cas Systems , Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats , Gene Editing , Prophages/genetics , Virus Activation , Bacteriophage lambda/genetics , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/virology , Gene Order , Gene Targeting , Genetic Engineering , Genome, Viral , Plasmids/genetics
7.
ISME J ; 14(3): 771-787, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31827247

ABSTRACT

Despite an overall temporal stability in time of the human gut microbiota at the phylum level, strong variations in species abundance have been observed. We are far from a clear understanding of what promotes or disrupts the stability of microbiome communities. Environmental factors, like food or antibiotic use, modify the gut microbiota composition, but their overall impacts remain relatively low. Phages, the viruses that infect bacteria, might constitute important factors explaining temporal variations in species abundance. Gut bacteria harbour numerous prophages, or dormant viruses, which can evolve to become ultravirulent phage mutants, potentially leading to important bacterial death. Whether such phenomenon occurs in the mammal's microbiota has been largely unexplored. Here we studied temperate phage-bacteria coevolution in gnotoxenic mice colonised with Roseburia intestinalis, a dominant symbiont of the human gut microbiota, and Escherichia coli, a sub-dominant member of the same microbiota. We show that R. intestinalis L1-82 harbours two active prophages, Jekyll and Shimadzu. We observed the systematic evolution in mice of ultravirulent Shimadzu phage mutants, which led to a collapse of R. intestinalis population. In a second step, phage infection drove the fast counter-evolution of host phage resistance mainly through phage-derived spacer acquisition in a clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats array. Alternatively, phage resistance was conferred by a prophage originating from an ultravirulent phage with a restored ability to lysogenize. Our results demonstrate that prophages are a potential source of ultravirulent phages that can successfully infect most of the susceptible bacteria. This suggests that prophages can play important roles in the short-term temporal variations observed in the composition of the gut microbiota.


Subject(s)
Clostridiales/genetics , Clostridiales/virology , Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Mice/microbiology , Mice/virology , Prophages/physiology , Animals , Bacteriophages/genetics , Bacteriophages/isolation & purification , Bacteriophages/physiology , Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats , Feces/microbiology , Female , Humans , Lysogeny , Mice, Inbred C3H , Prophages/genetics , Prophages/isolation & purification
8.
Microbiome ; 6(1): 65, 2018 04 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29615108

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Viral metagenomic studies have suggested a role for bacteriophages in intestinal dysbiosis associated with several human diseases. However, interpretation of viral metagenomic studies is limited by the lack of knowledge of phages infecting major human gut commensal bacteria, such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, a bacterial symbiont repeatedly found depleted in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients. In particular, no complete genomes of phages infecting F. prausnitzii are present in viral databases. METHODS: We identified 18 prophages in 15 genomes of F. prausnitzii, used comparative genomics to define eight phage clades, and annotated the genome of the type phage of each clade. For two of the phages, we studied prophage induction in vitro and in vivo in mice. Finally, we aligned reads from already published viral metagenomic data onto the newly identified phages. RESULTS: We show that each phage clade represents a novel viral genus and that a surprisingly large fraction of them (10 of the 18 phages) codes for a diversity-generating retroelement, which could contribute to their adaptation to the digestive tract environment. We obtained either experimental or in silico evidence of activity for at least one member of each genus. In addition, four of these phages are either significantly more prevalent or more abundant in stools of IBD patients than in those of healthy controls. CONCLUSION: Since IBD patients generally have less F. prausnitzii in their microbiota than healthy controls, the higher prevalence or abundance of some of its phages may indicate that they are activated during disease. This in turn suggests that phages could trigger or aggravate F. prausnitzii depletion in patients. Our results show that prophage detection in sequenced strains of the microbiota can usefully complement viral metagenomic studies.


Subject(s)
Bacteriophages/physiology , Faecalibacterium prausnitzii/virology , Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Animals , Bacteriophages/ultrastructure , Biodiversity , Colitis/etiology , DNA Damage , Dysbiosis , Genome, Viral , Humans , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/etiology , Metagenome , Metagenomics/methods , Mice , Retroelements , Symbiosis
9.
Science ; 355(6330): 1211-1215, 2017 03 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28302859

ABSTRACT

Bacteriophage transfer (lysogenic conversion) promotes bacterial virulence evolution. There is limited understanding of the factors that determine lysogenic conversion dynamics within infected hosts. A murine Salmonella Typhimurium (STm) diarrhea model was used to study the transfer of SopEΦ, a prophage from STm SL1344, to STm ATCC14028S. Gut inflammation and enteric disease triggered >55% lysogenic conversion of ATCC14028S within 3 days. Without inflammation, SopEΦ transfer was reduced by up to 105-fold. This was because inflammation (e.g., reactive oxygen species, reactive nitrogen species, hypochlorite) triggers the bacterial SOS response, boosts expression of the phage antirepressor Tum, and thereby promotes free phage production and subsequent transfer. Mucosal vaccination prevented a dense intestinal STm population from inducing inflammation and consequently abolished SopEΦ transfer. Vaccination may be a general strategy for blocking pathogen evolution that requires disease-driven transfer of temperate bacteriophages.


Subject(s)
Diarrhea/microbiology , Diarrhea/pathology , Enteritis/microbiology , Lysogeny , Salmonella Phages/pathogenicity , Salmonella typhimurium/pathogenicity , Salmonella typhimurium/virology , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Enteritis/prevention & control , Inflammation/microbiology , Inflammation/prevention & control , Intestines/microbiology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , SOS Response, Genetics , Salmonella Phages/genetics , Vaccination , Viral Proteins/metabolism
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