Abstract

Recent years have been marked by the growing interest towards virulent and temperate bacteriophage populations inhabiting the human lower gastrointestinal tract – the gut phageome. A number of studies demonstrated high levels of specificity and temporal stability of individual gut phageomes, as well as their specific alterations in disease cohorts, in parallel with changes in the bacteriome. It has been speculated that phages might have an active role in shaping the taxonomic composition and functional properties of the human gut bacteriome. An overwhelming majority of gut bacteriophages, however, remain uncultured, unclassified, and their specific hosts and infection strategies are still unknown. They are often referred to as “the viral dark matter”. A possible breakthrough in understanding of the phageome can only become possible when a significant proportion of the “the viral dark matter” is identified and linked to bacterial hosts. Here, we describe a method that enables rapid discovery and host-linking of novel bacteriophages in the gut via a combination of serial enrichment cultures and shotgun metagenomics of viral DNA. Using this approach dozens of novel and previously known bacteriophages were detected, including the ones infecting difficult-to-culture anaerobic bacteria. The majority of phages failed to produce lysis and propagate on host cultures in traditional assays. The newly identified phages include representatives of Siphoviridae, Myoviridae, Podoviridae, and crAss-like viruses, infecting diverse bacterial taxa of Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria, Verrucomicrobia and Proteobacteria phyla. The proposed new method has a potential for high-throughput screening applications for mass discovery of new phages in different environments.

Highlights

  • Bacteriophages are present in the human gut in at least the same numbers as bacteria (Shkoporov and Hill, 2019; Sausset et al, 2020)

  • Viral community composition in enriched viral supernatants reflected the composition of original faecal virome pools, with exception of some samples where successful enrichment was evident. (Figures 2A)

  • Large scale efforts are required in order to culture and catalogue microbiome phages, much similar to previous efforts of building collections and genome databases of reference bacterial strains for human microbiome research (The Human Microbiome Jumpstart Reference Strains Consortium, 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

Bacteriophages are present in the human gut in at least the same numbers as bacteria (Shkoporov and Hill, 2019; Sausset et al, 2020). Various metagenomic studies have reported that between 75%–99% of putative viral contigs cannot be taxonomically classified, or linked to any microbial hosts, due to the high degree of sequence divergence with known, previously cultured phages, and absence of a universal taxonomic marker genes (Shkoporov and Hill, 2019). This poorly interpretable fraction of the gut virome has there been nicknamed as ‘the viral dark matter’ (Roux et al, 2015b; Krishnamurthy and Wang, 2017; Clooney et al, 2019)

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