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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 3677-3686, Vol . 186,
No . 12
Phage-Host Interaction: an Ecological Perspective
Sandra Chibani-Chennoufi, Anne Bruttin, Marie-Lise Dillmann, and
Harald Brüssow*
Nestlé Research Centre, CH-1000 Lausanne 26, Switzerland
Nearly 100 years ago, Felix d'Herelle, the codiscoverer of bacteriophages,
used bacteria to control insect pests and used phages against
bacterial disease . His approaches reflected ecological insights
before this branch of biology became an established scientific
discipline . In fact, one might have predicted that phage research
would become the springboard for biotechnology and ecology . However,
d'Herelle was ahead of his time, and the zeitgeist in the 1930s
pushed physicists into the question "What is life?" Phages as the
simplest biological systems were the logical choice for this
question, and phage research became the cradle of molecular biology .
Now many researchers speak of a "new age of phage research." It is
now realized that phages play an important role in ecology (e.g.,
phage impact on the cycling of organic matter in the biosphere at a
global level) (27), that phages influence the
evolution of bacterial genomes (most obviously in the development of
bacterial pathogenicity) (7), and that phages might provide
potential tools to face the antibiotic resistance crisis in
medicine (59) . With this new trend, we now see a clear shift
from the reductionist approach, focusing on a handful of phages
in carefully controlled laboratory conditions, towards the study of
many different phages in the complexity of real-life situations .
In contrast to the molecular biology-oriented phage research where
the interaction of molecules took center stage, ecology focuses on
the interactions between organisms and their physical environment .
Much of ecology is therefore about the evolution of biological
diversity in space and time . In contrast to many branches of biology,
ecology attributes a great importance to quantitative relationships
and numbers and aims at a mathematical formulation of its
observations . It is thus appropriate to start this review with an
overview of phage titers encountered in the biosphere . Next, we ask
how a parasite targets its host if the latter is scarce or not in an
appropriate physiological state . Finally, we report on research that
tries to bridge phage ecology and genomics and cell biology
approaches . It is concluded that the integration of phages into
complex networks of interacting biological systems, and analysis by
molecular techniques, could give phage research a model character in
biology again .
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NUMBERS: PHAGE TITERS IN THE BIOSPHERE
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Just 14 years ago, a Norwegian group surprised the scientific
community with a report on the high concentration of phage-like
particles in coastal water and the ocean and even higher concentrations
in lakes (5) . In eutrophic estuarine water, bacteria are
found at a density of 106 cells/ml and viruses with a
concentration of 107 particles/ml . These concentrations
are estimates that vary with the seasons and the geographical
location . In addition, these figures refer to physical and not viable
entities . A popular model postulates about 10 to 50 different
bacterial species and 100 to 300 different phage strains (70)
in this environment . The higher number of phage species was justified
by the fact that each bacterial species may be infected by 10 phage
species . As one would expect, the production and distribution of
marine phages are determined by the productivity and density of the
host bacterial populations . This relationship is expressed by
the virus-to-bacterium ratio that is frequently at 10 to 1 . For a
comprehensive review on viruses in water and an extensive reference
list see reference 68 . Substantial theoretical and
experimental research efforts were undertaken to determine the
quantitative degree of virus-mediated bacterial mortality and to
assess the ratio of phage lysis versus grazing of bacteria by
protists and multicellular organisms . The greatest impact of phage
lysis was seen in oligotrophic environments, and the ratio of lysis
versus grazing changed with water depth both in the ocean and in
lakes (66) . To summarize the extensive literature,
different approaches in various environments yielded a remarkably
constant rate of virus-mediated bacterioplankton mortality of about
15% per day (61) . The rate seems to be higher for
heterotrophic bacteria than for the autotrophic cyanobacteria (61) .
Ecologically even more important is the profound effect of phages on
the relative proportions of different bacterial species or strains
in a community .
All these figures have important consequence for our biological
view of the world . If phages outnumber bacteria in the ocean, phages
are likely to be numerically the most prominent biological systems on
earth, with an estimated population size of
1030
phage particles . With these numbers, even rare phage-induced
events manifest with high frequency . For example, transduction, the
accidental packaging of bacterial host DNA into a phage particle,
occurs under optimal laboratory conditions about once in every 108
phage infections . When calculated for the global marine phage
population, it follows that gene transfer between organisms takes
place about 20 million billion times per second in the oceans (16) .
The actual numbers will probably be lower due to smaller transduction
efficiency and more rapid phage decay in the ocean than in the
laboratory . If only a small part of this DNA is traveling between
different bacterial species, gene transfer via marine phages opens up
enormous possibilities for horizontal DNA transfer between bacteria .
High concentrations of phages are not restricted to the ocean
water . Counts of up to 109 phage per gram of marine sediment
were recorded with bacterial counts higher than in the waters
described above (21) . Terrestrial ecosystems, e.g., soil
associated with plant roots in sugar beet fields, revealed 107
viruses per gram by using transmission electron microscopy (1) .
Not all viruses will be viable, but hybridization experiments with
Serratia and Pseudomonas spp . from the soil showed that
about 5% of the bacteria are actually phage infected .
There is a dictum that phages are found where bacteria thrive .
Thus, we should not be surprised that phages are found on us (skin)
and within us (oral cavity, gut) . In a survey of stool samples from
600 healthy adults, 34% of the subjects demonstrated coliphages (but
only 1% showed high amounts) (28) . Most of them
were classified as temperate phages related to phage lambda .
Ruminants that rely heavily on bacteria for cellulose digestion show
intestinal phage concentrations in excess of 107 phages
per gram of feces . Stool phages were mainly explored for their
potential to trace fecal contamination in the environment and to
monitor the intrusion of polluted surface waters into groundwater .
Phages are also present in the food we eat . Many food products
from our daily life are the result of fermentation processes by
lactic acid bacteria . Cheese factories using Lactococcus lactis
can be contaminated with high levels of phages; one study reported up
to 109 phage per ml of whey and up to 105 phage
per m3 in the air (48) . When the phage titers
exceeded 103 PFU/ml, the yogurt fermentation process was
delayed and came to a stop at higher phage titers, leading to
important economical losses (unpublished observations) .
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CYCLES: DYNAMIC PHAGE-HOST RELATIONSHIPS
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Time series experiments revealed the seasonality in marine phage
titers, demonstrating a dynamic relationship between phages and their
bacterial hosts (8) . In fact, at any given moment
the marine phage titer is the net result from two opposing processes:
synthesis of new phage particles due to ongoing lytic phage
infections, which is balanced by phage decay . Sunlight UV was
identified as the major destructive factor (69), causing up
to 5% phage infectivity loss per hour for surface waters due to
thymine dimer formation .
Repeat samples from a Norwegian fjord demonstrated seasonality in
the viral titers, with a low in the cold winter season and a high in
the summer . As a general rule, bacterioplankton produces greater
amounts of phages under environmental conditions favoring fast
bacterial growth and productivity . Other phage cycles occur on
shorter time scales, as predicted by the "killing the winner
populations" hypothesis . This concept states that phages expand on
the fastest growing host population in the given ecological setting (54) .
The phage epidemic ceases when the diminished host population no
longer supports phage replication . There is strong ecological
evidence that some bloom collapse is in fact mediated by phage lysis:
in the prealpine Lake of Constance, a transient increase in bacterial
abundance was closely followed by peaks in the frequency of infected
bacteria and then free phage (32) (Fig.
1B) . Variability in the ocean was shown even over
half-hour time intervals, probably reflecting synchronized infection
cycles (8) .
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FIG.1 . Cycles: dynamic phage-host relationships . (A) Phages in the
cheese factory . Cheese whey phage titers (y axis) observed on the
starter strains B to P indicated on the z axis on a given day (x
axis) before (negative days) and after the introduction of the new
starter strain . Reprinted from reference 14 with
permission . (B) Phages in a European lake . Chlorophyll a, bacterial
abundance, bacteria with intracellular mature phage particles, free
phages <100 nm in diameter, phage production, and burst size in the Lake
of Constance during different seasons between late March and August of
1992 . Error bars indicate standard deviations . Reprinted from reference
32 with permission.
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Cyclic phage development was also seen in other environments . Two
types of Serratia phages were associated with the soil surrounding
sugar beets: temperate Siphoviridae with a long latent period
and big burst size and virulent Podoviridae with a short latent
period and a small burst size . Over a 6-month observation period,
the initially predominant siphovirus population changed to one
dominated by the podovirus . Apparently, the two phages are adapted to
two quite different niches in the rhizosphere, where the availability
and physiological status of bacteria and plants changes with time (2) .
Some reports indicate that phage-host interaction can be quite
complicated in the soil . In streptomycetes, spatial heterogeneity in
phage-host interaction and temporal changes in phage susceptibility
defined bacterial escape strategies from phage lysis . It was revealed
that germinating spores were more susceptible to phage infection than
hyphae of developed mycelia . Mature, resistant mycelia adsorb most of
the Streptomyces-specific soil phages and thus protect
younger, susceptible hyphae from infection (15) .
Fluctuating phage titers are also a common observation in the
dairy factory . This reflects the buildup and ensuing disappearance of
phages specific for a starter strain imposed by the starter strain
rotation system . Phage dynamics were also documented in a large
intervention trial in a cheese factory (14) (Fig .
1A) . One starter combination was replaced by a second that was
insensitive to the resident phages of the factory . The intervention
resulted in a nearly immediate disappearance of the resident
phages . However, 5 to 7 days after the intervention, the first phages
infecting the new starters were detected . Restriction enzyme analysis
of the phage DNA traced the origin of the new phages to the rare
phages in the raw milk samples delivered to the factory during the
intervention period . Phage titers increased rapidly to the former
levels, and starter rotation had to be reintroduced . Persistence of
the phage in the absence of a propagating starter strain was not
observed in the factory (unpublished observations) .
In the human gut, it was reported that phage types and titers
differed when healthy adults and patients suffering from traveler's
diarrhea were compared (28) . The former excreted low titers
of lambda-like phages, while the latter yielded higher numbers
of T4-like phages . This change in the phage population was suggested
to reflect disturbances of the intestinal microflora during a bout of
diarrhea .
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COMPLEXITY: PHAGE GENOMICS
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Are phages genetically as diverse as they are numerous in the
biosphere? Only a few phage groups have been intensively studied by
sequencing projects (coliphages, mycobacteriophages, and dairy
phages) . These investigations demonstrated that the genetic
relatedness between phages reflected more the phylogenetic relationships
between their host bacteria than the possibilities of current
gene transfer in a given ecological setting . For example, phages from
dairy streptococci were closely related to phages from pathogenic
streptococci living on the skin . Lactococcus phages are the
prime cause of cheese fermentation failures . Due to this economic
interest, their genetic diversity was intensively explored . Different
types of prolate-headed and large and small isometric-headed
Siphoviridae (phages with long noncontractile tails) and rare
Podoviridae (phages with short tails) were described .
Interlaboratory phage comparisons led to the definition of 12
lactococcal phage species . In meat fermentation, you also find
Myoviridae (phages with contractile tails) infecting Lactobacillus
starters (see Fig . 2 for the basic tailed phage types) .
Mycobacteria are hosts to an amazingly diverse group of phages (51) .
Their morphology stimulated the researchers to use such fanciful
names as Corndog phage . As variable as the morphologies are, their
genomes are just as variable . Within the 14 sequenced mycobacteriophages,
10 lacked DNA sequence similarity with the other mycobacteriophages,
and nearly half of the predicted proteins lacked any database
matches . The workhorses of molecular bacteriology, Escherichia
coli and Bacillus subtilis, are also hosts to about 10 phages
with fundamentally different genome organization, not to mention
substantial differences at the DNA sequence level within each
group of phages . If these observations of 10 or more phages per
bacterial species can be generalized, phages might indeed represent
the largest unexplored reservoir of sequence information in the
biosphere . Random sequencing efforts of viral DNA from two uncultured
marine water samples (10) combined with a statistical
analysis revealed between 400 and 7,000 different viral types
in the two investigated 100-liter samples, with the most abundant
type representing 3% of the total viral population . However, a
different picture was obtained by the few complete marine phage
genomes . This analysis led to the description of a new phage family (Corticoviridae),
while other marine phages shared protein sequence similarity with
coliphages T7, T4, lambda, P2, and dairy siphophages, suggesting a
limited number of prototype phage genomes (18,
72) (Fig . 3) .
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FIG . 2 . Morphological diversity of phages isolated from food
fermentation . The negative-stain electron microscopic pictures show a
Lactobacillus plantarum myovirus LP65 (note the contracted tail in
the right phage in panel C), a L . plantarum siphovirus LP45
(panel D), and a Staphylococcus carnosus stc1 or -2 podovirus
(panel B, side view of stc2; panel A, stc1 [from beneath, the phage
baseplate becomes visible as a wheel-like structure]) . All phages were
isolated from meat (salami) fermentation . The bars are 100 nm.
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FIG . 3 . Genomic diversity of phages isolated from the ocean . The genome
maps of the currently sequenced marine phages are shown . From top to
bottom: Vibrio parahaemolyticus phage VP16C resembling dairy
Siphoviridae over the structural genes (GenBank accession no.
AY328853;
AY328852 for the related phage VP16T); Vibrio harveyi phage
VHML resembling E . coli siphophage lambda over the head and
myophage P2 over the tail genes (no . AY133112); Alteromonas phage
PM2, the first lipid-containing bacterial virus attributed to the new
phage family Corticoviridae (no . NC_000867); cyanophage P60
infecting Synechococcus sp., which shows a distant E . coli
phage T7-like genome organization (no . NC_003390); V .
parahaemolyticus phage VpV262, another marine phage with a T7-like
genome organization (no . NC_003907) . Not shown are a Roseobacter
phage SIO1 (no . NC_002519), since it only distantly resembled T7 phages
and otherwise nothing else in the database . Also not shown is the
broad-host-range vibriophage KVP40 (no . NC_005083) because its
244,835-bp genome is larger than all depicted phage genomes together .
KVP40 resembles E . coli myovirus T4 closely over the structural
and DNA replication modules but differs by large insertions of DNA
lacking database matches . The likely functions of the genes are color
coded: green, head; blue, tail; brown, head-to-tail genes (in VP16C) and
transmembrane structural genes (in PM2); orange, DNA replication;
yellow, transcription; red, lysogeny and recombination; mauve, lysis;
black, lysogenic conversion genes.
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The human gastrointestinal tract is rich in commensal life forms .
About 1011 bacteria per ml of colonic content are normally found .
The number of bacterial cells in the gut exceeds the total number
of cells constituting the human body . Gut bacteria contain about
400 bacterial species, but only 40 species account for 99% of
the total population . Also, shotgun cloning of the uncultured virus
fraction of human feces underlined the genetic diversity of this
fraction (9) . Statistical calculations suggested between
160 and 1,200 viral genotypes in the intestine .
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NUTRITION: INFECTING THE STARVED CELL
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Scientists in the laboratory generally work with media maintaining
optimal growth of their bacteria . Bacteria in the marine environment
have to live with much less nutrients .
Consequently, in situ burst size (the number of phages produced
per infected cell) is generally smaller in the marine environment
than in the laboratory, where bacteria grow to larger sizes . It was
predicted that the normal state of a marine bacterium corresponds to
the nutritional state of a laboratory bacterium under stationary
phase . In the laboratory, bacteria cannot be productively infected
with phages in the stationary phase . In general, infected
stationary-phase cells release progeny phage only after resumption of
cell growth . This observation could explain the persistence of
virulent phages within populations of nongrowing cells . However,
there are reports of Pseudomonas phages that productively
infect host cells maintained under starvation conditions (57) .
In this case, the latent period was lengthened and the burst size
greatly reduced when compared to those of logarithmic-phase infection
(71) . In fact, mycobacteriophages have found a way
to replicate in slow-growing cells (51) .
The nutritional considerations are also relevant for applied phage
research like the therapeutic use of phages against pathogenic
bacteria . Empirical phage therapy was conducted in the United States
during the 1930s and in the Soviet Union until quite recently, where
substantial success against bacterial diarrhea and skin infections
was reported (59) . Notably, oral T4-like phages
survived the gastrointestinal passage in mice (19) and
humans (unpublished results) . However, the presence of a host
cell and a corresponding phage is not sufficient to lead to a phage
infection in the intestine . The host cell must be in an appropriate
physiological state to allow productive infection, and the cell must
be in an accessible anatomical location for the phage . Mouse
experiments demonstrated that the resident E . coli flora was
protected against oral phage exposure, although the majority of the
fecally excreted E . coli strains were infected by the same
phage in vitro (19) . At first glance, one would
expect that the gut is a nutritionally privileged anatomical site .
However, E . coli within the lumen of the colon is nutritionally
deprived and nonreplicating (53) and is thus a poor
target for phages . The metabolically active intestinal E . coli
cells are found in microcolonies associated with the mucus layer of
the gut mucosa (37, 52), where
they are probably physically shielded from luminal phages . In
contrast, E . coli strains freshly introduced into the mouse
infection model were fully susceptible to oral phage exposure (19) .
Apparently, these new E . coli cells were actively replicating
but not yet associated with the mucus layer of the gut mucosa . This
example illustrates that we need a detailed knowledge of the ecology
of target bacteria and the therapeutic phages in the gut of the
mammalian host if phage therapy is to be successful (38) .
Similar considerations apply for the application of phages to other
body sites, e.g., the skin . The Soviet experience suggested the use
of phages for the treatment of wound infections (59),
and food microbiologists explore the use of phages to decontaminate
the skin of slaughtered chicken from Salmonella and
Campylobacter spp . (30) and E . coli O157
for beef (38) . The potential medical and food safety
applications of phages are favored by the availability of
broad-host-range Myoviridae for Staphylococcus aureus (50)
and Listeria monocytogenes (41) .
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POLYVALENCY: FINDING THE RIGHT CELL
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In near coastal water, the bacterial population consists of 106
cells per ml distributed over 100 different bacterial host species (68) .
Less than 104 cells per ml therefore constitute the
average target population for a species-specific phage .
Streptococcus thermophilus phages are found with titers of 200
infectious phages per ml of raw milk (14), while its target
cell is only detected in raw milk after enrichment . How can
phage infection cycles be maintained under these conditions?
Laboratory experiments with three phages, including T4, showed that
phage production did not occur below 104 cells/ml (67) .
Statistical analysis and back-calculations in natural marine
environments predicted 105 cells/ml as minimal bacterioplankton
concentrations for successful virus production . However, some
marine viruses replicated efficiently down to 103 specific host
cells/ml (62) . The determination of the variations of
host cell concentration over time allowed the approximation that
cyanophage replication still occurred when the host cell
concentration fell to 102 cells/ml (65) .
Broad-host-range (polyvalent) phages could be a solution to this
dilemma . Indeed, some observations suggest that phages isolated from
nutrient-poor marine environments showed a trend towards increased
polyvalency, possibly representing an adaptation to low host cell
concentrations .
For most phages investigated in the laboratory, host species
specificity is the rule . The polyvalent phages infecting different
genera in the Enterobacteriaceae must be regarded with some
caution because this family is such a closely related bacterial
group . Even data on marine phages indicate that most of them are host
species specific, many even demonstrate strain specificity .
Polyvalence was more prevalent in cyanophages, but fluorescence-labeled
cyanophages (33) demonstrated that they attached
specifically only to their host and not other bacteria of the natural
consortium . Data from the ocean showed that polyvalency was
correlated with phage morphology . Phages isolated from
high-light-adapted Prochlorococcus hosts yielded exclusively
Podoviridae that were strain specific (60) .
In contrast, low-light-adapted Prochlorococcus hosts yielded
Myoviridae that also infected Synechococcus spp., a
phylogenetically related cyanobacterium . Similarly, Synechococcus-infecting
Myoviridae also cross-infected Prochlorococcus spp.,
lending some support to the polyvalency concept in the marine
environment . Also, in other environments, Myoviridae showed a
broader host range than Siphoviridae and Podoviridae .
Polyvalency was not described in dairy phages: the analysis of
hundreds of phage isolates from cheese factories showed a very narrow
host range . We are only aware of exceptions for Lactobacillus
phages appearing in sauerkraut fermentation: one phage isolate could
infect two ecologically related Lactobacillus species (42) .
Furthermore, about 30% of lactobacilli constituting the major
commensals in the vagina of healthy women were lysogenic . Many
lysogens could be induced by mitomycin C, and some phages could
infect up to five different Lactobacillus species, which
dominate the vaginal flora (36) .
Even if polyvalency is not the rule, many phages have developed
efficient methods to change their host range by elegant genetic
tricks . A classical case is phage Mu, containing a recombinase that
inverses the orientation of the receptor-interacting gene leading to
the synthesis of a new receptor recognition specificity . A coliphage
possessed two different tail fiber proteins and showed the combined
host range of phages containing either one or the other tail gene (56) .
The similarities in the tail fiber genes of coliphages belonging to
different phage families (P2, T4, lambda) provide evidence that
illegitimate recombination resulting in domain exchanges occurs at
previously unappreciated levels (31) . Similarly,
phages infecting lactic streptococci can alter their host range by
exchanging variable domains flanked by conserved collagen-like
repeats that serve as target sites for homologous recombination (23) .
A fundamentally different method of host range changes was recently
described for Bordetella phages (40) . At
one genome end, the mtd (major tropism determinant) gene
encodes the phage protein responsible for host cell recognition . Its
C-terminal end varies between isolates differing in host range .
Directly adjacent to mtd is a second nonidentical copy of the
variable end of mtd called TR (for template repeat), followed
by a reverse transcriptase gene . Tropism switching is the result of a
TR-dependent reverse transcriptase-mediated process that introduces
base pair substitutions leading to amino acid changes at about 20
defined positions in the variable part of mtd . The authors
proposed a mechanism for this process analogous to the site-specific
retrohoming ability of group II introns .
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LYSOGENY: A SURVIVAL STRATEGY FOR BOTH PHAGE AND BACTERIA
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Theory predicts that lysogeny becomes the preferred strategy when the
cell density falls below the lower limit necessary for maintenance of
the phage density by repeated cycles of lytic infections . The
argument is that the production of temperate phages is independent of
host cell density . Indeed, two marine surveys revealed 40% mitomycin
C-inducible cells, and similar proportions of lysogens were
identified in Pseudomonas colonies from lakes . In contrast, UV
or sunlight was not a good inducer of prophages in water samples . The
surveys showed a trend for lysogeny to be more prevalent in
oligotrophic environments (35) . This observation
fits with theory, since this setting is dominated by the low density
of slow-growing bacteria . Other data contradict this interpretation .
Surveys in estuarine waters showed a seasonal development of lysogeny
with highs in the summer months when eutrophic conditions were
prevalent and lows in the winter months when cells were at their
minimum (20, 44) . There are further
contradictions with expectations . First, spontaneous induction
of prophages is generally low (10–2 to 10–5 phage
per bacterium per generation) . This release can only account
for far less than 1% of the phage concentrations in the ocean (35) .
Second, large phage surveys in the North Sea revealed that only 10%
of the phage isolates are temperate . In contrast, the genome maps of
the major virulent S . thermophilus phages isolated from
dairies still betray their origin from temperate parental phages . The
preponderance of virulent phages in dairy collections might therefore
represent a secondary character and an adaptation to the abundance of
host cells in the dairy environment . In fact, serial passage of a
temperate S . thermophilus phage resulted in its replacement by
a virulent derivative deletion mutant after only a few days .
However, lysogeny is a survival strategy for phage as well as for
bacteria (17) . Lysogens frequently outcompete the
nonlysogenic congeners, possibly due to the selective advantage
conferred by lysogenic conversion genes of the prophages . Some of
them are relatively universal, such as immunity functions and
superinfection exclusion genes . Other prophages contribute genes that
make the lysogen competitive under special ecological situations
(serum resistance conferred to the lysogen by the phage lambda
bor gene during blood growth of E . coli [3]) .
This phenomenon seems to be widespread in bacterial pathogens where
many virulence factors are encoded by prophages . However, even the
laboratory phages P1, P2, lambda, and Mu confer to the E . coli
lysogen a higher metabolic activity and faster and longer growth than
the nonlysogens (25, 39) .
Shiga-toxin producing E . coli (STEC) strains represent a spectacular
case of lysogeny . These strains are commonly found in the intestines
of asymptomatic cattle, while in humans the STEC O157:H7 strains
are dangerous food pathogens . The available evidence suggests
that they are derived over the last 50 years from the enteropathogenic
E . coli strain O55:H7 by the acquisition of two prophages encoding
the Shiga toxins Stx1 and Stx2, the major pathogenicity factor
of STEC (58) . In fact, the two sequenced O157:H7 isolates
contained 16 to 18 prophages, including many closely related
lambda-like prophages . Whole-genome PCR scanning of eight distinct
O157 strains revealed a high degree of genomic diversity, mainly
due to extensive structural and positional diversity of the
prophages, implying that prophages are the major factor in generating
genomic diversity in the O157 lineage (49) .
Toxin production differed in human and bovine STEC isolates (54) .
The lysogen expresses Stx in case of low iron concentration (a
typical growth-limiting factor for intestinal bacteria) (64),
leading to intestinal hemorrhage (liberating iron from red blood
cells leading to resumed bacterial growth and Stx downregulation) .
Notably, stx is under the control of the Fur repressor and thus
part of a large bacterial iron-controlled regulon . Similarly,
the diphtheria toxin encoded by a corynephage is under the control of
the DTxR, the master repressor of an iron regulon in this
gram-positive bacterium . Stx has no physiological secretion pathway
and is only released by lysing cells . As antibiotics induce the
prophage, chemotherapy can result in an aggravation of the clinical
condition . In a fascinating illustration of the selfish gene concept,
STEC recruits bystander intestinal E . coli cells via infection
with the released Stx phage for an amplification of the suicidal Stx
production (29) . Experiments with mice
demonstrated that the resistance or susceptibility pattern of the
intestinal flora towards the released Stx phage exerts either a
protective or an enhancing effect on the severity of STEC infections .
Clinically, this observation could explain the variability of the
disease symptoms in different O157-infected patients .
The observation that pathogenic bacteria convert environmental and
commensal bystander bacteria via lysogenization into toxin-producing
bacteria is not restricted to STEC (55) but was also found in
Vibrio spp . (26) and Streptococcus pyogenes
(11) .
Phages are a nuisance in the dairy industry, where they interfere
with industrial milk fermentation when they attack starter bacteria .
Therefore, food microbiologists have intensively studied phage-host
interactions . Lactic acid bacteria were under substantial evolutionary
pressure to develop antiphage strategies, as demonstrated by
numerous phage resistance systems naturally found in lactococci .
These mechanisms range from the blocking of phage DNA injection (45)
to abortive infection systems (abiA to abiU) interfering
with phage DNA replication, RNA transcription, phage development,
and morphogenesis . The evolutionary arms race between bacteria
and their phages has been well documented by dairy microbiologists .
For example, against bacterial restriction systems, phages used
different escape strategies covering either the loss of restriction
sites (47) or the gain of a methylase gene (34) .
Acquisition of chromosomal DNA by lactococcal phages confronted with
abi mechanisms has been repetitively demonstrated (6,
24) . The high number of prophages in
Lactococcus lactis offers in fact a large supply of new genetic
material to superinfecting phages which is accessible via homologous
recombination . Interestingly, the rich knowledge on phage resistance
mechanisms acquired in the dairy field could also contribute to the
understanding of the coexistence of phages and bacteria in the marine
environment or the management of phage infections in humans (e.g.,
the cigarette smoke-induced prophage propagation purportedly linked
to a decline of the protective Lactobacillus flora in the
vagina which might open the way to vaginosis and candida
superinfections) (36) .
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THE LOOK AHEAD: INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY WITH PHAGES
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Over the last 10 years, genome sequencing has fundamentally changed
microbiology . However, a genomic sequence is fundamentally static .
True biological processes are defined by the dynamic interaction of
biological systems . Phage and bacterium interaction is conceptually
the simplest case of such genome interaction . The infection process
provides a precise kinetics for this interaction . Microarray analysis
of phage transcription throughout the infection cycle is still
limited to phage T4-infected E . coli cells (43) .
In the next logical step, microarray analysis from the invading
phage must be integrated with that of the infected bacterium,
especially when it concerns such a well-investigated organism as
E . coli .
Phage infection is a highly dynamic process, probably inducing
bacterial gene expression . Some of these events might even be visible
in thin-section electron microscopy (Fig . 4) . If the
genomes of both the phage and the bacterium were sequenced,
transcription of both genomes could be analyzed on microarrays at
different time points after phage infection . If this analysis is
combined with thin-section immune electron microscopy and proteomics,
one could combine cell biology with gene and protein expression
studies to examine the consequences of two genomes confronting each
other in a hostile encounter .
|
FIG . 4 . Phage-host interaction . Thin-section electron microscopy of
myophage LP65 infecting an oral commensal Lactobacillus plantarum
strain . Note the conspicuous membrane system underlying the phage
adsorption site . The phage is the same as the myovirus shown in a
negative-staining preparation in the central panel of Fig .
2 . The bar is 100 nm.
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However, the analysis must not stop here, since this corresponds
still to the test tube situation that has dominated phage biology in
the past . The phage research community should immediately envision
the next level of complexity with interacting systems . An attractive
test system is provided by streptococcal lysogens . Many prophages
from low-GC-content, gram-positive bacteria encode candidate
lysogenic conversion genes located between the phage lysin gene and
the right attachment site (4) . In lactic streptococci
and in lactobacillus commensals, these prophage genes are expressed
during broth culture (63) . In contrast, the expression
level of the corresponding prophage genes in pathogenic streptococci
is low . Interestingly, when Streptococcus pyogenes comes in
contact with pharyngeal cells (the natural target cells in streptococcal
angina), the expression of the lysogenic conversion gene is
upregulated (12) . Broudy and coworkers have identified a
low-molecular-weight compound released by the pharyngeal cell that
induces the expression of this prophage gene (13) .
In this cell culture system, one has the chance to study by
microarray analysis the interaction of a phage, a bacterium, and a
human cell in a system that is directly relevant for the disease
process . The mammalian host not only promotes prophage induction in
S . pyogenes, but it also favors the lysogenization of
nontoxigenic bystander bacteria resulting in the generation of new
toxin-producing cells (11) . Within the mammalian
host, bacteria apparently alter not only their gene expression (46)
but their genomes themselves .
There are still other suitable model systems to study phage-host
interaction in a relevant ecological context . A lysogenic avian E .
coli pathogen, when injected into a chicken, showed an upregulation
of prophage gene expression (22) . This and similar
whole-animal experimental systems allow the analysis of genome
interactions at the next complexity level . As the data analysis for
such complex genome interactions will represent a substantial
challenge, the old virtue of phages, i.e., "small is beautiful," will
again become an asset in the postgenomic era .
We thank Anne Constable for reading the review and Barry Dowsett
(Salisbury, United Kingdom) for electron microscopy of the Staphylococcus
phage .
We thank the Swiss National Science Foundation for the support of
Sandra Chibani-Chennoufi (grant 5002-057832) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Nestlé Research
Centre, Vers-chez-les-Blanc, CH-1000 Lausanne 26, Switzerland . Phone: 0041 21
785 8676 . Fax: 0041 21 785 8544 . E-mail: harald.bruessow@rdls.nestle.com.
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