Abstract

Bacteriophages are viruses that infect bacteria. In this perspective, we discuss several aspects of a characteristic feature of bacteriophages, their host range. Each phage has its own particular host range, the range of bacteria that it can infect. While some phages can only infect one or a few bacterial strains, other phages can infect many species or even bacteria from different genera. Different methods for determining host range may give different results, reflecting the multiple mechanisms bacteria have to resist phage infection and reflecting the different steps of infection each method depends on. This makes defining host range difficult. Another difficulty in describing host range arises from the inconsistent use of the words “narrow” and especially “broad” when describing the breadth of the host range. Nearly all bacteriophages have been isolated using a single host strain of bacteria. While this procedure is fairly standard, it may more likely produce narrow rather than broad host range phage. Our results and those of others suggest that using multiple host strains during isolation can more reliably produce broader host range phages. This challenges the common belief that most bacteriophages have a narrow host range. We highlight the implications of this for several areas that are affected by host range including horizontal gene transfer and phage therapy.

Highlights

  • This is due to a combination of factors including specificity of phages’ host binding proteins, biochemical interactions during infection, presence of related prophages or particular plasmids and bacterial phage-resistance mechanisms (Adams, 1959; Hyman and Abedon, 2010; Diaz-Munoz and Koskella, 2014)

  • The relative ease of finding phages capable of infecting multiple strains or species of bacteria, as in the studies cited here, suggests that this may be less of an issue as many phages may be capable of infecting multiple types of hosts

  • It may be an error to consider host range as a stable property with a particular host always in or out of a phage’s host range (Hyman and Abedon, 2010; Koskella and Meaden, 2013) as hosts may evolve phage resistance and phages can evolve to overcome this resistance (Stern and Sorek, 2011; Samson et al, 2013; Chaturongakul and Ounjai, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Bacteriophages (phages) are viruses that infect bacteria. Phages are estimated to be the most abundant organisms on Earth with likely more than 1031 total individual phage on the planet (Chibani-Chennoufi et al, 2004; Abedon, 2008). The types (strains or species) of bacteria that a bacteriophage is able to infect is considered the host range of the phage in question (Hyman and Abedon, 2010). A plaquing host range is found by determining whether a phage is able to form plaques on a particular species or strain of host bacteria.

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