Abstract

Synthetic biology has been applied countless times for the modification and improvement of bacterial strains and for the synthesis of products that do not exist in nature. Phages are natural predators of bacteria controlling their population levels; however, their genomes carry several genes with unknown functions. In this work, Bacteriophage Recombineering of Electroporated DNA was used to assess the influence of deletion of a single gene with unknown function in the overall replication parameters of Salmonella phage PVP-SE2. Deletion of ORF_01, transcribed immediately after infection, reduced both the latent and rise periods by 5 min in PVP-SE2ΔORF_01 compared to the wild-type phage. A direct consequence of the deletion led to a smaller progeny release per infected cell by the mutant compared to the wild-type phage. Despite the difference in growth characteristics, the mutant phage remained infective towards exponentially growing cells. The mutation engineered endured for at least ten passages, showing that there is no reversion back to the wild-type sequence. This study provides proof of concept that methodologies used for phage engineering should always be complemented by phage growth characterization to assess whether a mutation can trigger undesirable characteristics.

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