Genomic analysis of 40 prophages located in the genomes of 16 carbapenemase-producing clinical strains of Klebsiella pneumoniae
Bleriot Rial, Ines Maria; TRASTOY PENA, ROCIO; Blasco Otero, Lucía; Fernández-Cuenca, Felipe; Ambroa, Antón; Fernández García, Laura; Pacios Santamaria, Olga; Perez-Nadales, Elena; Torre-Cisneros, Julian; Oteo-Iglesias, Jesús; Navarro, Ferran; Miró, Elisenda; Pascual, Alvaro; Bou Arévalo, Germán; Martínez-Martínez, Luis; Tomás Carmona, María del Mar
Identificadores
Identificadores
Visualización o descarga de ficheros
Visualización o descarga de ficheros
Fecha de publicación
2020Título de revista
Microbial Genomics
Tipo de contenido
Journal Article
DeCS
anotación de secuencias moleculares | resistencia a medicamentos | genoma | profagos | proteínas bacterianas | Klebsiella pneumoniae | biología computacional | beta-lactamasas | filogenia | infecciones por Klebsiella | humanos | tipificación de secuencias multilocus | tamaño del genomaMeSH
Phylogeny | Genome | Prophages | Multilocus Sequence Typing | Computational Biology | Humans | Drug Resistance | Klebsiella Infections | Molecular Sequence Annotation | Genome Size | Bacterial Proteins | beta-Lactamases | Klebsiella pneumoniaeResumen
Klebsiella pneumoniae is the clinically most important species within the genus Klebsiella and, as a result of the continuous emergence of multi-drug resistant (MDR) strains, the cause of severe nosocomial infections. The decline in the effectiveness of antibiotic treatments for infections caused by MDR bacteria has generated particular interest in the study of bacteriophages. In this study, we characterized a total of 40 temperate bacteriophages (prophages) with a genome range of 11.454-84.199 kb, predicted from 16 carbapenemase-producing clinical strains of K. pneumoniae belonging to different sequence types, previously identified by multilocus sequence typing. These prophages were grouped into the three families in the order Caudovirales (27 prophages belonging to the family Myoviridae, 10 prophages belonging to the family Siphoviridae and 3 prophages belonging to the family Podoviridae). Genomic comparison of the 40 prophage genomes led to the identification of four prophages isolated from different strains and of genome sizes of around 33.3, 36.1, 39.6 and 42.6 kb. These prophages showed sequence similarities (query cover >90 %, identity >99.9 %) with international Microbe Versus Phage (MVP) (http://mvp.medgenius.info/home) clusters 4762, 4901, 3499 and 4280, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis revealed the evolutionary proximity among the members of the four groups of the most frequently identified prophages in the bacterial genomes studied (33.3, 36.1, 39.6 and 42.6 kb), with bootstrap values of 100 %. This allowed the prophages to be classified into three clusters: A, B and C. Interestingly, these temperate bacteriophages did not infect the highest number of strains as indicated by a host-range assay, these results could be explained by the development of superinfection exclusion mechanisms. In addition, bioinformatic analysis of the 40 identified prophages revealed the presence of 2363 proteins. In total, 59.7 % of the proteins identified had a predicted function, mainly involving viral structure, transcription, replication and regulation (lysogenic/lysis). Interestingly, some proteins had putative functions associated with bacterial virulence (toxin expression and efflux pump regulators), phage defence profiles such as toxin-antitoxin modules, an anti-CRISPR/Cas9 protein, TerB protein (from terZABCDE operon) and methyltransferase proteins.