Anti-restriction functions of injected phage proteins revealed by peeling back layers of bacterial immunity.

通过层层剥开细菌免疫屏障,揭示了注射噬菌体蛋白的抗限制功能

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作者:Silas Sukrit, Carion Héloïse, Makarova Kira S, Sanchez Godinez David, Haniyur Surabhi, Volino Lucy, Yee Wearn-Xin, Fossati Andrea, Swaney Danielle, Bocek Michael, Koonin Eugene V, Bondy-Denomy Joseph
Virus-host competition drives evolution of diverse antivirus defenses, but how they co-operate in wild bacteria and how bacteriophages circumvent host immunity remains poorly understood. Here, using a functional screening platform to systematically explore the functions of phage accessory genes, we describe how cell-surface barriers can obscure the phenotypes of intracellular defenses in E. coli isolates. LPS modification emerged as a major theme, with the discovery of several small phage proteins that modify specific O-antigen structures, removing barriers to phage adsorption. Bypassing O-antigen in wild E. coli strains revealed another layer of defense: Type IV restriction endonucleases (RE) that target modified DNA of T-even phages (T2, T4, T6). We further show how injected proteins Ip2 and Ip3 of T4 inhibit distinct subtypes of these Type IV REs. Extensive variability in Type IV REs likely drives the emergence of subtype-specific inhibitors through multiple rounds of adaptation and counter-adaptation.

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