Abstract

Temperate bacteriophages are a common feature of Pseudomonas aeruginosa genomes, but their role in chronic lung infections is poorly understood. This study was designed to identify the diverse communities of mobile P. aeruginosa phages by employing novel metagenomic methods, to determine cross infectivity, and to demonstrate the influence of phage infection on antimicrobial susceptibility. Mixed temperate phage populations were chemically mobilized from individual P. aeruginosa, isolated from patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) or bronchiectasis (BR). The infectivity phenotype of each temperate phage lysate was evaluated by performing a cross-infection screen against all bacterial isolates and tested for associations with clinical variables. We utilized metagenomic sequencing data generated for each phage lysate and developed a novel bioinformatic approach allowing resolution of individual temperate phage genomes. Finally, we used a subset of the temperate phages to infect P. aeruginosa PAO1 and tested the resulting lysogens for their susceptibility to antibiotics. Here, we resolved 105 temperate phage genomes from 94 lysates that phylogenetically clustered into 8 groups. We observed disease-specific phage infectivity profiles and found that phages induced from bacteria isolated from more advanced disease infected broader ranges of P. aeruginosa isolates. Importantly, when infecting PAO1 in vitro with 20 different phages, 8 influenced antimicrobial susceptibility. This study shows that P. aeruginosa isolated from CF and BR patients harbors diverse communities of inducible phages, with hierarchical infectivity profiles that relate to the progression of the disease. Temperate phage infection altered the antimicrobial susceptibility of PAO1 at subinhibitory concentrations of antibiotics, suggesting they may be precursory to antimicrobial resistance.IMPORTANCE Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a key opportunistic respiratory pathogen in patients with cystic fibrosis and non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis. The genomes of these pathogens are enriched with mobile genetic elements including diverse temperate phages. While the temperate phages of the Liverpool epidemic strain have been shown to be active in the human lung and enhance fitness in a rat lung infection model, little is known about their mobilization more broadly across P. aeruginosa in chronic respiratory infection. Using a novel metagenomic approach, we identified eight groups of temperate phages that were mobilized from 94 clinical P. aeruginosa isolates. Temperate phages from P. aeruginosa isolated from more advanced disease showed high infectivity rates across a wide range of P. aeruginosa genotypes. Furthermore, we showed that multiple phages altered the susceptibility of PAO1 to antibiotics at subinhibitory concentrations.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a key opportunistic respiratory pathogen in patients with cystic fibrosis and non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis

  • All the clinical P. aeruginosa isolates in this panel contained inducible prophages, which is a higher proportion than previously reported in other Gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli [19]

  • Semisupervised data reduction modeling (PLS-DA) suggested that the phage lysate infectivity range against P. aeruginosa was greater for phages induced from P. aeruginosa isolated from more advanced stages of disease in both Cystic fibrosis (CF) and BR

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Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a key opportunistic respiratory pathogen in patients with cystic fibrosis and non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis. Previous work on the Liverpool epidemic strain (LES) of P. aeruginosa, which was isolated from a CF patient, has shown that this strain harbors multiple inducible temperate phages in its genome [10] These phages remain active and capable of lysis even after many years of chronic CF lung infection, suggesting that they may play an important role in the CF lung [11]. The LES temperate phages have been shown to contribute to this P. aeruginosa evolutionary adaptation in a sputum-like medium by causing phage insertion-mediated beneficial mutations, in motility and quorum-sensing-associated genes [18] Given these potentially important contributions to P. aeruginosa, we need to understand the potential for phage mobilization across a wider range of clinical P. aeruginosa strains. Resolving Phage Genomes in Chronic Lung Infections ated the effects of temperate phage infection on the antimicrobial susceptibility of P. aeruginosa in vitro

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