The genera of bacteriophages and their receptors are the major determinants of host range

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The genera of bacteriophages and their receptors are the major determinants of host range. / Gencay, Yilmaz Emre; Gambino, Michela; Prüssing, Tessa From; Brøndsted, Lone.

I: Environmental Microbiology, Bind 21, Nr. 6, 2019, s. 2095-2111.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Gencay, YE, Gambino, M, Prüssing, TF & Brøndsted, L 2019, 'The genera of bacteriophages and their receptors are the major determinants of host range', Environmental Microbiology, bind 21, nr. 6, s. 2095-2111. https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.14597

APA

Gencay, Y. E., Gambino, M., Prüssing, T. F., & Brøndsted, L. (2019). The genera of bacteriophages and their receptors are the major determinants of host range. Environmental Microbiology, 21(6), 2095-2111. https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.14597

Vancouver

Gencay YE, Gambino M, Prüssing TF, Brøndsted L. The genera of bacteriophages and their receptors are the major determinants of host range. Environmental Microbiology. 2019;21(6):2095-2111. https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.14597

Author

Gencay, Yilmaz Emre ; Gambino, Michela ; Prüssing, Tessa From ; Brøndsted, Lone. / The genera of bacteriophages and their receptors are the major determinants of host range. I: Environmental Microbiology. 2019 ; Bind 21, Nr. 6. s. 2095-2111.

Bibtex

@article{a12f0215a28b4e00bd85226e0c353f81,
title = "The genera of bacteriophages and their receptors are the major determinants of host range",
abstract = "The host range of phages is a key to understand their impact on bacterial ecology and evolution. Because of the complexity of phage–host interactions, the variables that determine the breadth of a phage host range remain poorly understood. Here, we propose a novel holistic approach to identify the host range determinants of a new collection of phages infecting Salmonella, isolated from animal, environmental and wastewater samples that were able to infect 58 of the 71 Salmonella strains in our collection. By using a set of statistic approaches (non-metric dimensional scaling, Bray–Curtis distance, PERMANOVA), we analysed phenotypic (host range on wild-type and receptor mutants) and genetic data (taxonomic assignment and receptor binding proteins) to evaluate the impact of isolation strain and niche, phage receptor and genus on the host range. Statistical analysis revealed that two phage characteristics influence the host range by explaining the most variance: the receptor by 45% and the genus by 51%. Interestingly, phage genus and receptor in combination explained 79% of the variance, establishing these characteristics as the major determinants of the host range. This study demonstrates the power and the novelty of applying statistical approaches to phenotypic and genetic data to investigate the ecology of phage–host interactions.",
author = "Gencay, {Yilmaz Emre} and Michela Gambino and Pr{\"u}ssing, {Tessa From} and Lone Br{\o}ndsted",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1111/1462-2920.14597",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "2095--2111",
journal = "Environmental Microbiology",
issn = "1462-2912",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The genera of bacteriophages and their receptors are the major determinants of host range

AU - Gencay, Yilmaz Emre

AU - Gambino, Michela

AU - Prüssing, Tessa From

AU - Brøndsted, Lone

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - The host range of phages is a key to understand their impact on bacterial ecology and evolution. Because of the complexity of phage–host interactions, the variables that determine the breadth of a phage host range remain poorly understood. Here, we propose a novel holistic approach to identify the host range determinants of a new collection of phages infecting Salmonella, isolated from animal, environmental and wastewater samples that were able to infect 58 of the 71 Salmonella strains in our collection. By using a set of statistic approaches (non-metric dimensional scaling, Bray–Curtis distance, PERMANOVA), we analysed phenotypic (host range on wild-type and receptor mutants) and genetic data (taxonomic assignment and receptor binding proteins) to evaluate the impact of isolation strain and niche, phage receptor and genus on the host range. Statistical analysis revealed that two phage characteristics influence the host range by explaining the most variance: the receptor by 45% and the genus by 51%. Interestingly, phage genus and receptor in combination explained 79% of the variance, establishing these characteristics as the major determinants of the host range. This study demonstrates the power and the novelty of applying statistical approaches to phenotypic and genetic data to investigate the ecology of phage–host interactions.

AB - The host range of phages is a key to understand their impact on bacterial ecology and evolution. Because of the complexity of phage–host interactions, the variables that determine the breadth of a phage host range remain poorly understood. Here, we propose a novel holistic approach to identify the host range determinants of a new collection of phages infecting Salmonella, isolated from animal, environmental and wastewater samples that were able to infect 58 of the 71 Salmonella strains in our collection. By using a set of statistic approaches (non-metric dimensional scaling, Bray–Curtis distance, PERMANOVA), we analysed phenotypic (host range on wild-type and receptor mutants) and genetic data (taxonomic assignment and receptor binding proteins) to evaluate the impact of isolation strain and niche, phage receptor and genus on the host range. Statistical analysis revealed that two phage characteristics influence the host range by explaining the most variance: the receptor by 45% and the genus by 51%. Interestingly, phage genus and receptor in combination explained 79% of the variance, establishing these characteristics as the major determinants of the host range. This study demonstrates the power and the novelty of applying statistical approaches to phenotypic and genetic data to investigate the ecology of phage–host interactions.

U2 - 10.1111/1462-2920.14597

DO - 10.1111/1462-2920.14597

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30888719

AN - SCOPUS:85063966046

VL - 21

SP - 2095

EP - 2111

JO - Environmental Microbiology

JF - Environmental Microbiology

SN - 1462-2912

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 217110706