1. Two asian jumbo phages, ϕRSL2 and ϕRSF1, infect Ralstonia solanacearum and show common features of ϕKZ-related phages.
- Author
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Bhunchoth, Anjana, Blanc-Mathieu, Romain, Mihara, Tomoko, Nishimura, Yosuke, Askora, Ahmed, Phironrit, Namthip, Leksomboon, Chalida, Chatchawankanphanich, Orawan, Kawasaki, Takeru, Nakano, Miyako, Fujie, Makoto, Ogata, Hiroyuki, and Yamada, Takashi
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BACTERIOPHAGES , *RALSTONIA solanacearum , *VIRUS morphology , *VIRUS phylogeny , *RNA polymerases - Abstract
Jumbo phages infecting Ralstonia solanacearum were isolated in Thailand (ϕRSL2) and Japan (ϕRSF1). They were similar regarding virion morphology, genomic arrangement, and host range. Phylogenetic and proteomic tree analyses demonstrate that the ϕRSL2 and ϕRSF1 belong to a group of evolutionary related phages, including Pseudomonas phages ϕKZ, 201ϕ2-1 and all previously described ϕKZ-related phages. Despite conserved genomic co-linearity between the ϕRSL2 and ϕRSF1, they differ in protein separation patterns. A major difference was seen in the detection of virion-associated-RNA polymerase subunits. All β- and β′-subunits were detected in ϕRSF1, but one β′-subunit was undetected in ϕRSL2. Furthermore, ϕRSF1 infected host cells faster (latent period: 60 and 150 min for ϕRSF1 and ϕRSL2, respectively) and more efficiently than ϕRSL2. Therefore, the difference in virion-associated-RNA polymerase may affect infection efficiency. Finally, we show that ϕRSF1 is able to inhibit bacterial wilt progression in tomato plants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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