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. 2011 Jan;1(1):31-45.
doi: 10.4161/bact.1.1.14942.

Phages in nature

Affiliations

Phages in nature

Martha Rj Clokie et al. Bacteriophage. 2011 Jan.

Abstract

Bacteriophages or phages are the most abundant organisms in the biosphere and they are a ubiquitous feature of prokaryotic existence. A bacteriophage is a virus which infects a bacterium. Archaea are also infected by viruses, whether these should be referred to as 'phages' is debatable, but they are included as such in the scope this article. Phages have been of interest to scientists as tools to understand fundamental molecular biology, as vectors of horizontal gene transfer and drivers of bacterial evolution, as sources of diagnostic and genetic tools and as novel therapeutic agents. Unraveling the biology of phages and their relationship with their hosts is key to understanding microbial systems and their exploitation. In this article we describe the roles of phages in different host systems and show how modeling, microscopy, isolation, genomic and metagenomic based approaches have come together to provide unparalleled insights into these small but vital constituents of the microbial world.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Dendrogram depicting phylogenetic relationships among T4-like phages based on gene content, i.e. gene presence/absence. T4 (accession NC_000866), RB49 (accession NC_005066), KVP40 (accession NC_005083), Syn9 (accession NC_005083), S-PM2 (accession NC_006820), P-SSM4 (accession NC006884), P-SSM2 (accession NC006883) S-RSM4 (accession FM207411). The dendogram was constructed from of a binary matrix of gene presence/absence from which Sorensen's distance was calculated.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Morphology of selected virus like - particles in non-cultured viral community of horse feces. M - myoviruses, S - siphoviruses, P - podoviruses. Note the high prevalence of the siphoviruses with very long tails. The morphotype S18 was the most prevalent virus in this sample comprising approx. 10% of the whole community. Taken from Kulikov et al. 2007.
Figure 3
Figure 3
PCR-fingerprinting of 18 random field isolates of coliform bacteria obtained from the single sample of horse feces. Taken from Isaeva et al., 2010.

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