Abstract

The human gut contains an expanse of largely unstudied bacteriophages. Among the most common are crAss-like phages, which were predicted to infect Bacteriodetes hosts. CrAssphage, the first crAss-like phage to be discovered, contains a protein encoding a Bacteroides-associated carbohydrate-binding often N-terminal (BACON) domain tandem repeat. Because protein domain tandem repeats are often hotspots of evolution, BACON domains may provide insight into the evolution of crAss-like phages. Here, we studied the biodiversity and evolution of BACON domains in bacteriophages by analysing over 2 million viral contigs. We found a high biodiversity of BACON in seven gut phage lineages, including five known crAss-like phage lineages and two novel gut phage lineages that are distantly related to crAss-like phages. In three BACON-containing phage lineages, we found that BACON domain tandem repeats were associated with phage tail proteins, suggestive of a possible role of these repeats in host binding. In contrast, individual BACON domains that did not occur in tandem were not found in the proximity of tail proteins. In two lineages, tail-associated BACON domain tandem repeats evolved largely through horizontal transfer of separate domains. In the third lineage that includes the prototypical crAssphage, the tandem repeats arose from several sequential domain duplications, resulting in a characteristic tandem array that is distinct from bacterial BACON domains. We conclude that phage tail-associated BACON domain tandem repeats have evolved in at least two independent cases in gut bacteriophages, including in the widespread gut phage crAssphage.

Highlights

  • Bacteriophage populations are essential for stability and proper functioning of the human gut microbiome [1]

  • We constructed a profile hidden Markov model (HMM) of the crAssphage-like BACON domain, which we identified in half of the known candidate crAss-like phage lineages and in two novel gut phage lineages

  • We investigated the evolution of BACON domain tandem repeats in crAssphage and other gut bacteriophages

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Summary

Introduction

Bacteriophage populations are essential for stability and proper functioning of the human gut microbiome [1]. The role of phage populations in the gut microbiome is increasingly better understood, the role of individual phage species remains almost completely unknown. This last fact is exemplified by crAssphage, a phage that was first described from. CrAssphage has been recognised as the prototypical member of an expansive family of phages [7] that is abundant in the human gut [8]. The crAss-like phages are distributed globally [9], present in approximately half the human population [9,10], and very abundant in some individual gut viromes [11]. Little is known about the role, evolution and distinguishing characteristics of specific crAss-like phage lineages

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