VALENTOVÁ, Lucie, Tibor FÜZIK and Pavel PLEVKA. Ride the filament! – A hunting strategy of P. aeruginosa infecting phage JBD30 revealed by cryo-electron tomography. In Phages 2021. 2021.
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Basic information
Original name Ride the filament! – A hunting strategy of P. aeruginosa infecting phage JBD30 revealed by cryo-electron tomography
Authors VALENTOVÁ, Lucie (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Tibor FÜZIK (703 Slovakia, belonging to the institution) and Pavel PLEVKA (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition Phages 2021, 2021.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Conference abstract
Field of Study 10607 Virology
Country of publisher United States of America
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14740/21:00123922
Organization unit Central European Institute of Technology
Keywords in English Pseudomonas aeruginosa; human pathogen; bacteriophage JBD30
Tags rivok
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Pavla Foltynová, Ph.D., učo 106624. Changed: 24/1/2022 09:26.
Abstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic human pathogen that causes acute and chronic infections, which can lead to life threatening septic shock. Treatment of these infections is complicated by frequent antibiotic resistance of this bacterium. Here, we present bacteriophage JBD30 that infects P. aeruginosa and is a potential candidate for phage therapy. Using cryo-electron tomography we followed the infection of P. aeruginosa by bacteriophage JBD30 from attachment to the bacterial cell, to the cell lysis and production of new phage progeny. Bacteriophage JBD30 belongs to the family Siphoviridae. Its virion is composed of icosahedral head connected via dodecameric connector complex with long flexible non-contractile tail. JBD30 tail is terminated with a baseplate decorated with three long and three short tail fibres. Virions of bacteriophage JBD30 bind to P. aeruginosa type IV pili protruding from a bacterial cell pole in the close neighbourhood of a flagellum. Pili type IV are involved in twitching motility, adherence to the surfaces and biofilm formation. Bacteriophages JBD30 bind to pili (type IV) by their long tail fibres. Then they are pulled towards the cell surface by pili retraction, where they irreversibly bind with short tail fibers to their secondary receptor. Finally, the bacteriophages puncture the outer cellular membrane, degrade the peptidoglycan layer and inject their DNA into the host cell. Our results revealed the strategy that bacteriophage JBD30 uses to attack and infect bacterium P. aeruginosa. Combined with the information gained from our wet-lab experiments it enable us to propose the model of phage (JBD30) – bacterium (P. aeruginosa) interaction.
Links
LL1906, research and development projectName: Replikace fágů v bakteriálním biofilmu
Investor: Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the CR, Phage replication in bacterial biofilm
PrintDisplayed: 5/10/2024 12:57