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Pectobacterium versatile Bacteriophage Possum: A Complex Polysaccharide-Deacetylating Tail Fiber as a Tool for Host Recognition in Pectobacterial Schitoviridae .

Anna A LukianovaPeter V EvseevMikhail M ShneiderElena A DvoryakovaAnna D TokmakovaAnna M ShpirtMarsel Rasimovich KabilovEkaterina A ObraztsovaAlexander S ShashkovAlexander N IgnatovYuriy A KnirelFevzi S-U DzhalilovKonstantin A Miroshnikov
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
Novel, closely related phages Possum and Horatius infect Pectobacterium versatile , a phytopathogen causing soft rot in potatoes and other essential plants. Their properties and genomic composition define them as N4-like bacteriophages of the genus Cbunavirus , a part of a recently formed family Schitoviridae . It is proposed that the adsorption apparatus of these phages consists of tail fibers connected to the virion through an adapter protein. Tail fibers possess an enzymatic domain. Phage Possum uses it to deacetylate O-polysaccharide on the surface of the host strain to provide viral attachment. Such an infection mechanism is supposed to be common for all Cbunavirus phages and this feature should be considered when designing cocktails for phage control of soft rot.
Keyphrases
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • sars cov
  • machine learning
  • deep learning
  • copy number
  • cystic fibrosis
  • protein protein
  • gene expression
  • amino acid
  • binding protein
  • water soluble
  • aqueous solution
  • genome wide