
pmid: 24762028
handle: 10261/132527
2.6% of the genome of the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida KT2440 encodes phage-related functions, but the burden of such opportunistic DNA on the host physiology is unknown. Each of the four apparently complete prophages borne by this strain was tested for stability, spontaneous excision and ability to cause lysis under various stressing conditions. While prophages P3 (PP2266-PP2297) and P4 (PP1532-1584) were discharged from the genome at a detectable rate, their induction failed otherwise to yield infective viruses. Isogenic P. putida KT2440 derivatives bearing single and multiple deletions of each of the prophages were then subjected to thorough phenotypic analyses, which generally associated the loss of proviral DNA with an increase of physiological vigour. The most conspicuous benefit acquired by prophage-less cells was a remarkable improvement in tolerance to UV light and other insults to DNA. This was not accompanied, however, with an upgrade of recA-mediated homologous recombination. The range of tolerance to DNA damage gained by the prophage-free strain was equivalent to the UV resistance endowed by the TOL plasmid pWW0 to the wild-type bacterium. While the P. putida's prophages are therefore genuinely parasitic, their detrimental effects can be offset by acquisition of compensatory traits through horizontal gene transfer.
This study was supported by the BIO Program of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, the ST-FLOW and ARYSIS Contracts of the EU, the ERANET-IB Program and the PROMT Project of the CAM. The work in MK Laboratory is supported by Estonian Science Foundation, grant number 9114 to MK, by Estonian Ministry of Research Targeted Financing Project SF0180031s08.
Peer reviewed
Pseudomonas putida, Ultraviolet Rays, Prophages, Chromosomal deletions, Recombination, Proviruses, Stress, Physiological, Eagle effect, Stress resistance, Genome, Bacterial, DNA Damage, Plasmids, Sequence Deletion
Pseudomonas putida, Ultraviolet Rays, Prophages, Chromosomal deletions, Recombination, Proviruses, Stress, Physiological, Eagle effect, Stress resistance, Genome, Bacterial, DNA Damage, Plasmids, Sequence Deletion
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