1. Ecological and functional roles of bacteriophages in contrasting environments: marine, terrestrial and human gut
- Author
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Teagan L Brown, Oliver J Charity, and Evelien M Adriaenssens
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Infectious Diseases ,Bacteria ,Humans ,Metagenome ,Bacteriophages ,Metagenomics ,Genome, Viral ,Microbiology - Abstract
While they are the most abundant biological entities on the planet, the role of bacteriophages (phages) in the microbiome remains enigmatic and understudied. With a rise in the number of metagenomics studies and the publication of highly efficient phage mining programmes, we now have extensive data on the genomic and taxonomic diversity of (mainly) DNA bacteriophages in a wide range of environments. In addition, the higher throughput and quality of sequencing is allowing for strain-level reconstructions of phage genomes from metagenomes. These factors will ultimately help us to understand the role these phages play as part of specific microbial communities, enabling the tracking of individual virus genomes through space and time. Using lessons learned from the latest metagenomic studies, we focus on two explicit aspects of the role bacteriophages play within the microbiome, their ecological role in structuring bacterial populations, and their contribution to microbiome functioning by encoding auxiliary metabolism genes.
- Published
- 2022
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