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Replication Protein Rep Provides Selective Advantage to Viruses in the Presence of CRISPR-Cas Immunity.

Weijia ZhangYuvaraj Bhoobalan-ChittyXichuan ZhaiYan HuiLars Hestbjerg HansenLing DengXu Peng
Published in: The CRISPR journal (2022)
Anti-Clustered regularly interspaced small palindromic repeat (CRISPR) (Acr) phages cooperate to establish a successful infection in CRISPR-containing host. We report here the selective advantage provided by a replication initiator, Rep, toward cooperative host immunosuppression by viruses encoding Acrs. A rep knockout mutant (Δ gp16 ) of Sulfolobus islandicus rod-shaped virus 2 produced around fourfold less virus in a CRISPR-null host, suggesting that Rep is the major replication initiator. In addition to Rep-dependent replication initiation from the viral genomic termini, we detected Rep-independent replication initiation from nonterminal sites. Intriguingly, despite the presence of Acrs, lack of Rep showed a profound effect on virus propagation in a host carrying CRISPR-Cas immunity. Accordingly, the co-infecting parental virus ( rep -containing) outcompeted the Δ gp16 mutant much more quickly in the CRISPR-containing host than in CRISPR-null host. Despite the nonessentiality, rep is carried by all known members of Rudiviridae, which is likely an evolutionary outcome driven by the ubiquitous presence of CRISPR-Cas in Sulfolobales.
Keyphrases
  • crispr cas
  • genome editing
  • genome wide
  • sars cov
  • wild type
  • binding protein