Phage K gp102 Drives Temperature-Sensitive Antibacterial Activity on USA300 MRSA.
Susan M LehmanRohit KongariAdam M GlassMatthew KoertMelissa D RayRoger D PlautScott StibitzPublished in: Viruses (2022)
There is widespread interest in using obligately lytic bacteriophages ("phages") to treat human bacterial infections. Among Staphylococcus aureus infections, the USA300 lineage is a frequent cause of invasive disease. We observed that phage K, a model S. aureus myophage, exhibits temperature-sensitive growth on USA300 strains, with the wild-type phage providing poorer growth suppression in broth and forming smaller and fainter plaques at 37 °C vs. 30 °C. We isolated 65 mutants of phage K that had improved plaquing characteristics at 37 °C when compared to the parental phage. In all 65 mutants, this phenotype was attributable to loss-of-function (LoF) mutations in gp102 , which encodes a protein of unknown function that has homologs only among the Herelleviridae (SPO1-like myophages infecting gram-positive bacteria). Additional experiments with representative mutants consistently showed that the temperature-sensitive plaque phenotype was specific to USA300 MRSA strains and that Gp102 disruption was correlated with improved suppression of bacterial growth in broth and improved antibacterial activity in a mouse model of upper respiratory tract infection. The same genotype and in vitro phenotypes could be replicated in close relatives of phage K. Gp102 disruption did not have a detectable effect on adsorption but did delay cell culture lysis relative to wild-type under permissive infection conditions, suggesting that gp102 conservation might be maintained by selective pressure for more rapid replication. Expression of gp102 on a plasmid was toxic to both an MSSA and a USA300 MRSA strain. Molecular modeling predicts a protein with two helix-turn-helix domains that displays some similarity to DNA-binding proteins such as transcription factors. While its function remains unclear, gp102 is a conserved gene that is important to the infection process of Kayvirus phages, and it appears that the manner in which USA300 strains defend against them at 37 °C can be overcome by gp102 LoF mutations.
Keyphrases
- wild type
- staphylococcus aureus
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- escherichia coli
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- transcription factor
- mouse model
- respiratory tract
- biofilm formation
- binding protein
- poor prognosis
- endothelial cells
- gene expression
- crispr cas
- gram negative
- silver nanoparticles
- copy number
- candida albicans
- multidrug resistant
- fluorescent probe
- living cells
- genome wide analysis
- quantum dots