Home
Scholarly Works
Phage-encoded ribosomal protein S21 expression is...
Preprint

Phage-encoded ribosomal protein S21 expression is linked to late stage phage replication

Abstract

Abstract The ribosomal protein S21 (bS21) gene has been detected in diverse viruses with a large range of genome sizes, yet its in situ expression and potential significance have not been investigated. Here, we report five closely related clades of bacteriophages (phages) represented by 47 genomes (8 curated to completion and up to 331 kbp in length) that encode a bS21 gene. The bS21 gene is on the reverse strand within a conserved region that encodes the large terminase, major capsid protein, prohead protease, portal vertex proteins and some hypothetical proteins. These phages are predicted to infect Bacteroidetes species that inhabit a range of depths in freshwater lakes. Transcriptionally active bS21-encoding phages were sampled in the late-stage of replication, when core structural genes, bS21 and a neighboring gene of unknown function were highly expressed. Thus, our analyses suggest that bS21, which is involved in translation initiation, substitutes into the Bacteroidetes ribosomes and selects for phage transcripts during the late-stage replication when large-scale phage protein production is required for assembly of phage particles.

Authors

Chen L-X; Jaffe AL; Borges AL; Penev PI; Nelson TC; Warren LA; Banfield JF

Publication date

October 11, 2021

DOI

10.1101/2021.10.11.463225

Preprint server

bioRxiv
View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team