Mining bacterial NGS data vastly expands the complete genomes of temperate phages

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

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Author(s)

  • Xianglilan Zhang
  • Xiangcheng Xie
  • Yunjia Hu
  • Qiang Sun
  • Wei Lin
  • Shanwei Tong
  • Wei Yan
  • Huiqi Wen
  • Shixiang Zhai
  • Cheng Sun
  • Fangyi Wang
  • Qi Niu
  • Andrew M. Kropinski
  • Yujun Cui
  • Xiaofang Jiang
  • Shaoliang Peng
  • Yigang Tong

Related Research Unit(s)

Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Article numberlqac057
Journal / PublicationNAR Genomics and Bioinformatics
Volume4
Issue number3
Online published3 Aug 2022
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2022

Link(s)

Abstract

Temperate phages (active prophages induced from bacteria) help control pathogenicity, modulate community structure, and maintain gut homeostasis. Complete phage genome sequences are indispensable for understanding phage biology. Traditional plaque techniques are inapplicable to temperate phages due to their lysogenicity, curbing their identification and characterization. Existing bioinformatics tools for prophage prediction usually fail to detect accurate and complete temperate phage genomes. This study proposes a novel computational temperate phage detection method (TemPhD) mining both the integrated active prophages and their spontaneously induced forms (temperate phages) from next-generation sequencing raw data. Applying the method to the available dataset resulted in 192 326 complete temperate phage genomes with different host species, expanding the existing number of complete temperate phage genomes by more than 100-fold. The wet-lab experiments demonstrated that TemPhD can accurately determine the complete genome sequences of the temperate phages, with exact flanking sites, outperforming other state-of-the-art prophage prediction methods. Our analysis indicates that temperate phages are likely to function in the microbial evolution by (i) cross-infecting different bacterial host species; (ii) transferring antibiotic resistance and virulence genes and (iii) interacting with hosts through restriction-modification and CRISPR/anti-CRISPR systems. This work provides a comprehensively complete temperate phage genome database and relevant information, which can serve as a valuable resource for phage research.

Research Area(s)

Citation Format(s)

Mining bacterial NGS data vastly expands the complete genomes of temperate phages. / Zhang, Xianglilan; Wang, Ruohan; Xie, Xiangcheng et al.
In: NAR Genomics and Bioinformatics, Vol. 4, No. 3, lqac057, 09.2022.

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

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