StenM_174: A Novel Podophage That Infects a Wide Range of Stenotrophomonas spp. and Suggests a New Subfamily in the Family Autographiviridae .
Vera V MorozovaVyacheslav I YakubovskijIvan K BaykovYuliya N KozlovaArtem Yurievich TikunovIgor V BabkinAlevtina V BardashevaElena V ZhirakovskaiaNina V TikunovaPublished in: Viruses (2023)
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia was discovered as a soil bacterium associated with the rhizosphere. Later, S. maltophilia was found to be a multidrug-resistant hospital-associated pathogen. Lytic bacteriophages are prospective antimicrobials; therefore, there is a need for the isolation and characterization of new Stenotrophomonas phages. The phage StenM_174 was isolated from litter at a poultry farm using a clinical strain of S. maltophilia as the host. StenM_174 reproduced in a wide range of clinical and environmental strains of Stenotrophomonas , mainly S. maltophilia , and it had a podovirus morphotype. The length of the genomic sequence of StenM_174 was 42,956 bp, and it contained 52 putative genes. All genes were unidirectional, and 31 of them encoded proteins with predicted functions, while the remaining 21 were identified as hypothetical ones. Two tail spike proteins of StenM_174 were predicted using AlphaFold2 structural modeling. A comparative analysis of the genome shows that the Stenotrophomonas phage StenM_174, along with the phages Ponderosa, Pepon, Ptah, and TS-10, can be members of the new putative genus Ponderosavirus in the Autographiviridae family. In addition, the analyzed data suggest a new subfamily within this family.
Keyphrases
- multidrug resistant
- genome wide identification
- genome wide
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- escherichia coli
- microbial community
- acinetobacter baumannii
- drug resistant
- bioinformatics analysis
- copy number
- electronic health record
- emergency department
- big data
- cystic fibrosis
- gram negative
- machine learning
- transcription factor
- risk assessment
- human health
- climate change