Abstract

Many major marine bacterial lineages such as SAR11, Prochlorococcus, SAR116, and several Roseobacter lineages have members that are abundant, relatively slow-growing, and genome streamlined. The isolation of phages that infect SAR11 and SAR116 have demonstrated the dominance of these phages in the marine virosphere. However, no phages have been isolated from bacteria in the Roseobacter RCA lineage, another abundant group of marine bacteria. In this study, seven RCA phages that infect three different RCA strains were isolated and characterized. All seven RCA phages belong to the Podoviridae family and have genome sizes ranging from 39.6 to 58.1 kb. Interestingly, three RCA phages (CRP-1, CRP-2, and CRP-3) show similar genomic content and architecture as SAR116 phage HMO-2011, which represents one of the most abundant known viral groups in the ocean. The high degree of homology among CRP-1, CRP-2, CRP-3, and HMO-2011 resulted in the contribution of RCA phages to the dominance of the HMO-2011-type group. CRP-4 and CRP-5 are similar to the Cobavirus group roseophages in terms of gene content and organization. The remaining two RCA phages, CRP-6 and CRP-7, show limited genomic similarity with known phages and represent two new phage groups. Metagenomic fragment recruitment analyses reveal that these RCA phage groups are much more abundant in the ocean than most existing marine roseophage groups. The characterization of these RCA phages has greatly expanded our understanding of the genomic diversity and evolution of marine roseophages and suggests the critical need for isolating phages from the abundant but "unculturable" bacteria.IMPORTANCE The RCA lineage of the marine Roseobacter group represents one of the slow-growing but dominant components of marine microbial communities. Although dozens of roseophages have been characterized, no phages infecting RCA strains have been reported. In this study, we reported on the first RCA phage genomes and investigated their distribution pattern and relative abundance in comparison with other important marine phage groups. Two of the four RCA phage groups were found closely related to previously reported SAR116 phage HMO-2011 and Cobavirus group roseophages, respectively. The remaining two groups are novel in the genome contents. Our study also revealed that RCA phages are widely distributed and exhibit high abundance in marine viromic data sets. Altogether, our findings have greatly broadened our understanding of RCA phages and emphasize the ecological and evolutionary importance of RCA phages in the marine virosphere.

Highlights

  • Many major marine bacterial lineages such as SAR11, Prochlorococcus, SAR116, and several Roseobacter lineages have members that are abundant, relatively slow-growing, and genome streamlined

  • Phylogenetic analysis based on the 16S rRNA gene sequences suggests that FZCC0023, FZCC0040, and FZCC0042 all belong to the RCA cluster

  • In terms of the 16S rRNA gene sequence, FZCC0040 and FZCC0042 are 100% identical to RCA23, while FZCC0023 has 2 nucleotide mismatches with RCA23. These RCA strains can be distinguished from RCA23 and each other based on their 16S-23S rDNA intergenic spacer (ITS) sequences, suggesting that they are closely related but distinct RCA members

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Summary

Introduction

Many major marine bacterial lineages such as SAR11, Prochlorococcus, SAR116, and several Roseobacter lineages have members that are abundant, relatively slow-growing, and genome streamlined. The isolation of pelagiphages and SAR116 phage demonstrated that phages infecting abundant but relatively slow-growing marine bacteria make up a significant portion of marine viruses in the ocean [9, 10]. More than 30 phages that infect representatives of several major Roseobacter clusters have been reported [27] All of these roseophages were isolated from the Roseobacter strains that can grow in rich culture media and have high growth rates, such as Roseobacter SIO67, Ruegeria pomeroyi DSS-3, Roseobacter denitrificans OCh114, Sulfitobacter spp., and Dinoroseobacter shibae DFL 12 [27,28,29,30,31,32].

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