Cluster M mycobacteriophages Bongo, PegLeg, and Rey with unusually large repertoires of tRNA isotypes
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Pope, Welkin H (Author)
- Anders, Kirk R (Author)
- Baird, Madison A (Author)
- Bowman, Charles A (Author)
- Boyle, Michelle M (Author)
- Broussard, Gregory W (Author)
- Chow, Tiffany W (Author)
- Clase, Kari (Author)
- Cooper, Shannon D (Author)
- Cornely, Kathleen (Author)
- Dejong, Randall J (Author)
- Delesalle, Veronique A (Author)
- Deng, Lisa (Author)
- Dunbar, David (Author)
- Edgington, Nicholas P (Author)
- Ferreira, Christina M (Author)
- Hafer, Kathleen Weston (Author)
- Hartzog, Grant A (Author)
- Hatherill, J Robert (Author)
- Hughes, Lee E (Author)
- Ipapo, Khristina (Author)
- Krukonis, Gregory P (Author)
- Meier, Christopher G (Author)
- Monti, Denise L (Author)
- Olm, Matthew R (Author)
- Page, Shallee T (Author)
- Peebles, Craig L (Author)
- Rinehart, Claire A (Author)
- Rubin, Michael R (Author)
- Russell, Daniel A (Author)
- Sanders, Erin R (Author)
- Schoer, Morgan (Author)
- Shaffer, Christopher D (Author)
- Wherley, James (Author)
- Vazquez, Edwin J (Author)
- Yuan, Han (Author)
- Zhang, Daiyuan (Author)
- Cresawn, Steven G (Author)
- Jacobssera, Deborah (Author)
- Hendrix, Roger W (Author)
- Hatfull, Graham F (Author)
Title
Cluster M mycobacteriophages Bongo, PegLeg, and Rey with unusually large repertoires of tRNA isotypes
Abstract
Genomic analysis of a large set of phages infecting the common host Mycobacterium smegmatis mc2155 shows that they span considerable genetic diversity. There are more than 20 distinct types that lack nucleotide similarity with each other, and there is considerable diversity within most of the groups. Three newly isolated temperate mycobacteriophages, Bongo, PegLeg, and Rey, constitute a new group (cluster M), with the closely related phages Bongo and PegLeg forming subcluster M1 and the more distantly related Rey forming subcluster M2. The clusterMmycobacteriophages have siphoviral morphologies with unusually long tails, are homoimmune, and have larger than average genomes (80.2 to 83.7 kbp). They exhibit a variety of features not previously described in other mycobacteriophages, including noncanonical genome architectures and several unusual sets of conserved repeated sequences suggesting novel regulatory systems for both transcription and translation. In addition to containing transfer-messenger RNA and RtcB-like RNA ligase genes, their genomes encode 21 to 24 tRNA genes encompassing complete or nearly complete sets of isotypes. We predict that these tRNAs are used in late lytic growth, likely compensating for the degradation or inadequacy of host tRNAs. They may represent a complete set of tRNAs necessary for late lytic growth, especially when taken together with the apparent lack of codons in the same late genes that correspond to tRNAs that the genomes of the phages do not obviously encode. © 2014, American Society for Microbiology.
Publication
Journal of Virology
Date
2014
Volume
88
Issue
5
Pages
2461-2480
Journal Abbr
J. Virol.
Citation Key
pop00031
ISSN
0022538X (ISSN)
Language
English
Extra
40 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation Key Alias: lens.org/014-261-678-659-153
tex.type: [object Object]
Citation
Pope, W. H., Anders, K. R., Baird, M. A., Bowman, C. A., Boyle, M. M., Broussard, G. W., Chow, T. W., Clase, K., Cooper, S. D., Cornely, K., Dejong, R. J., Delesalle, V. A., Deng, L., Dunbar, D., Edgington, N. P., Ferreira, C. M., Hafer, K. W., Hartzog, G. A., Hatherill, J. R., … Hatfull, G. F. (2014). Cluster M mycobacteriophages Bongo, PegLeg, and Rey with unusually large repertoires of tRNA isotypes. Journal of Virology, 88(5), 2461–2480. https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.03363-13
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