Abstract

It is generally recognized that phages are a mortality factor for their bacterial hosts. This could be particularly true in spring phytoplankton blooms, which are known to be closely followed by a highly specialized bacterial community. We hypothesized that phages modulate these dense heterotrophic bacteria successions following phytoplankton blooms. In this study, we focused on Flavobacteriia, because they are main responders during these blooms and have an important role in the degradation of polysaccharides. A cultivation-based approach was used, obtaining 44 lytic flavobacterial phages (flavophages), representing twelve new species from two viral realms. Taxonomic analysis allowed us to delineate ten new phage genera and ten new families, from which nine and four, respectively, had no previously cultivated representatives. Genomic analysis predicted various life styles and genomic replication strategies. A likely eukaryote-associated host habitat was reflected in the gene content of some of the flavophages. Detection in cellular metagenomes and by direct-plating showed that part of these phages were actively replicating in the environment during the 2018 spring bloom. Furthermore, CRISPR/Cas spacers and re-isolation during two consecutive years suggested that, at least part of the new flavophages are stable components of the microbial community in the North Sea. Together, our results indicate that these diverse flavophages have the potential to modulate their respective host populations.

Highlights

  • Marine bacteriophages outnumber their hosts by one order of magnitude in surface seawater and infect 10–45% of the bacterial cells at any given time [1,2,3]

  • This study indicates that flavophages are a mortality factor during spring blooms in temperate coastal seas

  • In 2017, a weekly sampling was conducted over five weeks starting on March 14 based intergenomic similarities calculated with VIRIDIC [55] and (ii) core protein phylogeny

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Summary

Introduction

Marine bacteriophages outnumber their hosts by one order of magnitude in surface seawater and infect 10–45% of the bacterial cells at any given time [1,2,3]. They have a major impact on bacterioplankton dynamics. Marine phages modulate their hosts, and the diversity and function of whole ecosystems. This global impact is reflected in a high phage abundance [12] and diversity [13, 14]

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