Comparative Genomics of Bacillus subtilis Phages Related to phiNIT1 from Desert Soils of the Southwest United States
Student Authors
Albert Vill '16
Leigh Magness '22
Brianne (Tomko) Chaudhry '16
Katherine (Boas) Lichty '16
Madison Strine '18
Alexandra Guffey '18
Jenna DeCurzio '18
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-14-2023
Department 1
Biology
Abstract
Background: Bacillus subtilis is a Gram-positive bacterium commonly found in soil. Phages infecting B. subtilis have diverse genomes and may be used in therapeutics against pathogenic Bacillus species. Materials and Methods: Phages were isolated and purified on B. subtilis. Comparative genomics was performed to determine taxonomy, a liquid-culture lysis assay was used to determine host range, and virion structure was observed for a representative phage by transmission electron microscopy. Results: Five phages were found to have high sequence similarity to each other and known phages, including phiNIT1. Annotation shows a conserved genome structure and protein families unique to this group. Repeated sequences are concentrated in intergenic regions at the ends of the genomes. Capsid structure and tail length suggest these phages are myoviruses. Conclusions: The phages described here share sequence similarity and genomic structure with known Bacillus phages. This study expands our understanding of the genetic diversity of Bacillus phages.
DOI
10.1089/phage.2023.0027
Recommended Citation
Vill, Albert C., Véronique A. Delesalle, Leigh H. Magness, Brianne E. Chaudhry, Katherine B. Lichty, Madison S. Strine, Alexandra A. Guffey, Jenna M. DeCurzio, and Greg P. Krukonis. “Comparative Genomics of Bacillus Subtilis Phages Related to phiNIT1 from Desert Soils of the Southwest United States.” PHAGE 4, no. 4 (December 2023): 173–80. https://doi.org/10.1089/phage.2023.0027.
Comments
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