Abstract
Phages are the main source of within-species bacterial diversity and drivers of horizontal gene transfer, but we know little about the mechanisms that drive genetic diversity of these mobile genetic elements (MGEs). Recently, we showed that a sporulation selection regime promotes evolutionary changes within SPβ prophage of Bacillus subtilis, leading to direct antagonistic interactions within the population. Herein, we reveal that under a sporulation selection regime, SPβ recombines with low copy number phi3Ts phage DNA present within the B. subtilis population. Recombination results in a new prophage occupying a different integration site, as well as the spontaneous release of virulent phage hybrids. Analysis of Bacillus sp. strains suggests that SPβ and phi3T belong to a distinct cluster of unusually large phages inserted into sporulation-related genes that are equipped with a spore-related genetic arsenal. Comparison of Bacillus sp. genomes indicates that similar diversification of SPβ-like phages takes place in nature. Our work is a stepping stone toward empirical studies on phage evolution, and understanding the eco-evolutionary relationships between bacteria and their phages. By capturing the first steps of new phage evolution, we reveal striking relationship between survival strategy of bacteria and evolution of their phages.
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Introduction
Bacteriophages are major regulators of bacteria. Each day, approximately half of bacterial biomass is killed by lytic phages, imposing a constant predator-prey evolutionary arms race [1,2,3]. Phages reside in 40−50% of bacterial genomes as prophage elements [4], serving as a main source of intra-species genetic diversity and gene transfer agents [5]. Despite their abundance and relevance, we still understand very little about ecological and evolutionary imprint of prophages. This knowledge gap is particularly paramount for nonpathogenic bacteria, such as widely applied biocontrol and probiotic strains, which often (e.g., Bacillus genus) can be extremely rich in prophages [6]. Moreover, between-strains differences in prophage elements in certain Bacillus species (e.g., Bacillus subtilis) leads to social ‘incompatibility’, which manifests in strong competitive interactions and physical barriers between bacterial swarms [7, 8]. Currently, we do not understand what promotes prophage diversity within closely related strains.
It is believed that phages predominantly evolve through recombination [9,10,11], but the rate of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) can vary substantially, depending on phage lifestyle of host phylum [12]. Gene gain/loss by HGT seems to be more common in Firmicutes or Bacteroides phages, compared to Cyanophages, and it is more pronounced in phages with temperate lifestyle [12,13,14]. Recombination between phages or between phages and their hosts can be either homologous [15, 16] or non-homologous [17], relying on phage- or host-encoded recombinases [15, 18]. It was proposed that gene shuffling regularly occurs between (functional or defective) prophages and phages that co-infect the same host bacterium [15]. Prophages of naturally competent bacteria (e.g., B. subtilis) can recombine with foreign phage DNA via transformation [19]. Finally, phages can randomly or specifically incorporate fragments of host chromosomes via generalized [20, 21] or specialized [22, 23] transduction, respectively, thereby contributing to the spread of antibiotic resistance [21] or virulence genes [24]. Although evidence from comparative genomics indicates frequent phage recombination [25,26,27], there is little experimental research in this topic. Phage recombination has been experimentally studied using few models, predominantly Salmonella typhimurium P22 with Escherichia coli lambdoid phages [28, 29], or Lactococcus lactis phages sampled across decades from diary production line [25]. Therefore, empirical research on prophage evolution is limited.
Interestingly, certain prophages of Bacilli undergo genetic rearrangements upon host development, acting as so-called phage regulatory switches (RSs) [30]. RS can switch between integrated and extrachromosomal forms to modulate reproduction and survival of their hosts [30]. Certain B. subtilis strains carry an SPβ prophage or its derivative that integrates into an spsM gene, encoding for polysaccharide synthase [31, 32]. Immediately prior to sporulation the prophage undergoes precise excision and circularization, allowing spsM reconstitution and expression in the sporulating mother cell. The resulting spsM-related polysaccharide eventually becomes part of the spore coat, contributing to spore dispersability [31]. Besides SPβ, another prophage-like element named skin also undergoes excision in the mother cell, allowing reconstitution of sigK encoding a late sporulation sigma factor that is necessary for completing the sporulation process [33,34,35]. Similar mother cell-specific excisions have been observed in other Bacillus sp. [31] and in Clostridium sp. [36, 37], but we do not understand what drives such a distinctive relationship between spore-forming hosts and their phages, nor what eco-evolutionary consequences this has. Interestingly, SPβ and skin both encompass genes relevant for sporulation, including sspC that is crucial for spore DNA protection and repair [38, 39], and the rapE−phrE signalling system involved in sporulation initiation [40, 41]. Furthermore, certain prophages can improve or even restore sporulation in B. subtilis [42], suggesting the possibility of a cooperative relationship between certain phages and spore-formers.
We recently demonstrated that under a repeated imposed sporulation selection regime, SPβ prophages of B. subtilis undergo major genetic rearrangements, giving rise to new hybrid phages [43]. Normally, the lytic cycle of SPβ prophages is blocked by the ICEBs1 (Integrative and Conjugative Element of B. subtilis) conjugative element [44], but in the evolved strains, phages are released spontaneously, killing or lysogenizing the original host [43].
Herein, we investigated the triggering cause of diversification and spontaneous release of SPβ prophages and sought evidence for similar diversification of SPβ taking place in nature. Using experimental evolution, de novo genome sequencing and testing, we showed that barely detectable, low copy number phage DNA residing in certain B. subtilis strains can propagate under an appropriate selection regime and recombine with indigenous prophages. The new prophages modulate host development, most likely through regulatory genes. Bioinformatic comparison of available Bacillus sp. genomes demonstrated that similar recombination may frequently occur in nature between SPβ and related phages. Our work shows how diversification of prophages through recombination can drive early diversification of bacterial populations.
Materials and methods
Strains and cultivation conditions
Supplementary Table S1 describes the bacterial strains used in this study and Supplementary Table S2 lists all phages used in this work. Plasmids and oligonucleotides used for cloning purposes to construct some of the strains used here are listed in Supplementary Table S3. Strains were routinely maintained in lysogeny broth (LB) medium (LB-Lennox, Carl Roth; 10 g/l tryptone, 5 g/l yeast extract, and 5 g/l NaCl).
Strain DTUB200 was obtained by lysogenization of DK1042 (WT NCBI 3610) with a phage phi3T obtained from CU1065. DTUB201 (ΔSPβ) was obtained by transforming DK1042 with gDNA obtained from SPmini and selecting for erythromycin-resistant colonies. Strain DTUB202 (ΔkamA) was obtained by transforming DK1042 with gDNA obtained from BKK19690 and selecting for kanamycin-resistant colonies. Strains DTUB251 and DTUB254 were obtained by transforming DK1042 with plasmids pDR111_rapX and pDR111_spsX, respectively. Plasmid pDR111 was linearized using oAD47/pAD48 primers, rapX and spsX were amplified from B410mB using oAD49/oAD50 and pAD71/oAD72 primers, respectively (see Supplementary Table 3). Next, the linearized pDR111 was ligated with rapX and with spsX using Gibson Assembly® Master Mix (New England BioLabs), resulting in pDR111_rapX and pDR111_spsX. All modifications of DK1042 were verified by PCR followed by Sanger sequencing.
Genome sequencing and analysis
Phage sequencing was performed by Illumina MiSeq instrument and a 2 × 250 nt paired-end chemistry (MiSeq Reagent Kit v2 (500-cycles). Primary data analysis (base-calling) was carried out with Bbcl2fastq^ software (v2.17.1.14, Illumina). In vitro fragment libraries were prepared using the NEBNext®Ultra™ II DNA Library Prep Kit for Illumina. Reads were quality and length trimmed in CLC Genomics Workbench Tool 11.0 and de novo genome assembly was performed using SPAdes-3.13.0-Linux and CLC Genomics Workbench 11.0.
De novo sequencing and assembly of B310mA, B410mB and B410wtB genomes was performed by Functional Genomics Center Zurich, from genomic DNA of exponentially grown cultures, extracted using the EURex Bacterial and Yeast Genomic DNA Kit. Sequencing of 168 ancestor (ancestor of B310mA, B410mB and B410wtB) was described in our previous manuscript [43].
Evolved PY79 strains (presented in Supplementary Dataset 2) were obtained as previously described [45]. Samples for whole-genome sequencing were prepared according to the Illumina Multiplexing Sample Preparation Guide, using NEBNext reagents and Illumina’s indexed primers. Sequencing was performed by the Bauer Core Facility at Harvard University. Mapping of raw fastq reads to reference PY79 genome (NC_022898.1) was performed using Bowtie2 [46, 47]. The alignment was sorted using SAMtools [48, 49], data filtering and SNP variant calling was performed using the bcftools package. Mapping of raw fastq reads to phi3T genome (KY030782.1) was performed using Bowtie2 in Galaxy platform (https://cpt.tamu.edu/galaxy-pub) and coverage was visualized in the browser using Trackster tool. Mapping of raw SOLiD sequencing reads (168anc) to unique phi3Ts fragments was performed using CLC Genomics Workbench 11.0.1. Short phi3T fragments, to which fastq could be mapped, showed over 90% sequence identity to PY79 genome, as confirmed by BLAST. All bacterial and phage genomes sequenced during this work, where deposited at NCBI database as completed genomes and/or raw sequencing data (Table 1).
Raw sequencing data of PY79 strains [45] and available from B. Burton (briana.burton@wisc.edu). Raw sequencing data of 168 cultivated under near- zero growth conditions [50] are available from O. Kuipers (o.p.kuipers@rug.nl).
Sporulation and germination assays
To examine sporulation dynamics selected strains were cultivated in MSgg medium [51] at 30 °C, 220 rpm, and total CFU and spore counts were analyzed after 12, 24 and 36 h. In sporulation assay performed with DTUB251 and DTUB254, the medium was supplemented with 0.2 mM IPTG. To access the spore count, cells were incubated at 80 °C for 20 min, plated on LB-agar (1.5%) and the number of obtained colonies was divided by the number of colonies obtained prior to the heat-treatment. To access the germination, the culture incubation was prolonged to 72 h to allow vast majority of cells to sporulate. Next, spores were washed 2× with 0.9% NaCl, and resuspendend in germination solution (0.6 g KH2PO4, 1.4 g K2HPO4, 0.2 g (NH4)2SO4, 0.1 g Na-citrate, 0.02 g MgSO4 × 7H2O, 0.5 g glucose, 3.56g L-alanine resuspended in 100 ml of dH2O) to reach final OD600 cca 10. Decline of OD600 was measured immediately, indicating germination [52]. Additional assessment of germination dynamics was performed using real-time brightfield microscopy by inducing spores with L-alanine on agarose pads, as described previously [53]. Agarose pads (1.5%, 9 mm diameter, 1 mm height) were inoculated with 2.6 µl spore solution (3.75*105 spores µl−1) and placed upside down into a 24-well glass-bottom microtiter plate. Germination was induced by adding 5 µl of a 200 mM L-alanine solution to the top of the pad. Germination events were monitored by changes in gray level spore intensity. The fraction of germinated spores at time t was calculated as the number of germinated spores divided by the number of dormant spores before induction (i.e., by excluding pre-germinated spores).
Spore selection experiment with NCBI 3610
Strains were cultivated in 10 ml of MSgg medium in 100 ml-glass bottles in 30 °C with shaking at 220 rpm. Every 48 h, three alternative transfer methods were applied: direct transfer of untreated cells to fresh medium, transfer of heat-treated cells (80 °C for 20 min) and transfer of chemically treated cells (5% NaOH for 2 min, followed by washing in PBS). In each case, fresh cultures were initiated with 1% inoculum. Culture supernatants and cell pellets were collected prior each transfer to monitor phage release and genetic rearrangements, respectively. At each transfer, frozen stocks were preserved, to allow the analysis of subsequent steps of phage recombination in the future.
Isolation of phage particles and phage DNA
Lysogens were cultivated in LB medium at 37 °C with shaking at 200 rpm for 8 h. Culture supernatants were collected, adjusted to pH of 7.0, filter-sterilized and mixed at a 1:4 rate with PEG-8000 solution (PEG-8000 20%, 116 g/l NaCl). After overnight incubation at 4 °C, the solutions were centrifuged for 60 min at 12000 rpm to obtain phage precipitates. The pellets were resuspended in 1% of the initial volume in SM buffer (5.8 g/l NaCl, 0.96 g/l MgSO4, 6 g/l Tris-HCl, pH 7.5). Such phage solutions were visualized by transmission electron microscopy and used as a source of different phage variants, purified from single plaques. In plaque assay and further phage propagation from single plaques, Δ6 strain [54] was used as a host. Specifically, phage solutions were diluted in order to obtain well-separated single plaques. Selected plaques (differing with morphology) were carefully removed from the soft agar using sterile scalpel, resuspended in 200 μl of SM buffer and used to infect exponentially growing phage-free host to allow propagation of selected phage variants. Phages were subsequently propagated in soft agar and liquid host suspension until the titer reached at least 109 pfu/ml and then subjected to DNA isolation. Phage DNA was extracted using phenol-chloroform method, as described previously [55].
Transmission electron microscopy
Before use, 400 mesh nickel grids with a 3–4 nm thick carbon film, CF400-Ni-UL EMS Diasum, were hydrophilized by 30 s of electric glow discharging. Next, 5 μl of purified phage solutions were applied onto the grids and allowed to adsorb for 1 min. The grids were rinsed three times on droplets of milliQ water and subjected to staining with 2% uranyl acetate. Specifically, with a help of EM grid-grade tweezers, the grids were placed sequentially on droplets of 2% uranyl acetate solution for 10 s, 2 s and 20 s. Excess uranyl acetate was wicked away using filter paper and the grids were allowed to dry overnight and stored in a desiccator until analysis. Transmission electron microscopy was performed utilizing a FEI Tecnai T12 Biotwin TEM operating at 120 kV located at the Center for Electron Nanoscopy at the Technical University of Denmark, and images were acquired using a Bottom mounted CCD, Gatan Orius SC1000WC.
Prophage database construction and phage comparisons
Bacillus prophage database was constructed by finding genomic coordinates using Phaster software [56, 57] from fully assembled Bacillus genomes available at NCBI. All prophages between 80 and 50 kB, integrated between 1.9 and 2.3 Mb in the chromosome were selected for further analysis. Additional prophages, categorized as SPβ-like, were retrieved the genomes that gave BLAST hits to phi3T and SPβ, if these hits belonged to a prophage region that was at least 40 kB. Duplicates and misassembled genomes (NZ_CP032855.1) were removed.
Interruption of spsM and kamA in all the selected lysogens was examined by genome BLAST against the sequence of an intact copy of these gene. All strains that carried a split copy of spsM and kamA, also carried a large prophage between left and right arms of these genes. In such cases, the Phaster-predicted terminal positions of the prophage was corrected to match the sequence splitting spsM or kamA. Integration genes of remaining large prophages were determined by extracting and clustering 1000 bp-long prophage flanking regions using vsearch at 46% identity. These regions were then compared to well-annotated B. subtilis 168, using blastx, to find functional homologs.
The alignment of prophage sequences was performed in MAFFT program, using FFT-NS-2 algorithm and auto settings [58], phylogenetic tree was build using FastTree, using Jukes-Cantor model and auto settings [59, 60] and visualized in CLC Main Workbench. Phylogenetic tree of B. subtilis host strains was constructed using autoMLST (https://automlst.ziemertlab.com/) [61] based on 100 shared proteins. Two strains that were not lysogenic for SPβ-like prophage (MB9_B4 and MB9_B6) were included in the analysis to exclude SPβ prophage from the shared pool of proteins in the tree building. The three was visualized in CLC Main Workbench. Prophage annotation was performed using RAST annotation platform. Alignment of SPβ and phi3Ts was visualized using Easyfig [62].
Statistical analysis
Statistical differences between two experimental groups were identified using two-tailed Student’s t tests assuming equal variance. Normality of data distribution was tested by Shapiro–Wilk and Kolmogorov–Smirnov tests. No statistical methods were used to predetermine sample size and the experiments were not randomized.
Results
Strains evolved under a sporulation selection regime carry hybrid prophages
We previously showed that several passages of B. subtilis through the dormant spore stage leads to spontaneous release of phage particles into the culture medium (Fig. 1a). Spontaneous phage release occurred in B. subtilis 168 grown in rich medium under static, biofilm-promoting conditions after roughly ten passages which involved selection for spores, but not in the absence of such selection in parallel populations [43]. Recently, similar spontaneous phage release was observed for B. subtilis NCBI 3610 grown in minimal medium under shaken-culture conditions after ten passages through dormant spore stage [63]. Some of these phages resemble indigenous SPβ [64], but they facilitate killing of the ancestor strain [43] (Fig. 1b). To further characterize the phage-releasing evolved strains, three isolates [43] were subjected to genome sequencing (see Materials and Methods). De novo sequencing revealed the presence of an exogenous phi3T-like prophage (KY030782.1; 99.98% sequence identity) [65], which is closely related to SPβ (58% sequence identity) (Fig. 1c, Supplementary Fig. 1A, Supplementary Fig. 2A). We named this phage phi3Ts. The only difference between phi3T and phi3Ts was a 725 bp fragment (labelled ‘s’ for sporulation-derived) within phi3Ts, replacing the 1265 bp fragment of phi3T (nucleotides 101,429−102,694; Fig. 1d). Although, the ‘s’ fragment shared no homology with phi3T or B. subtilis 168 chromosome, it could be found within SPβ-like prophages of six B. subtilis strains from different regions around the world (Fig. 1d). In the evolved strains, the phi3Ts prophage either disrupted the kamA gene located ~11 kb from SPβ, or it created a hybrid with SPβ with a ~11 kb fragment deleted between kamA and SPβ (Fig. 1c, Supplementary Fig 1A). In addition, sequencing coverage within the described prophage regions was increased several-fold, suggesting augmented replication of hybrid phage DNA (Supplementary Fig. 1B, Supplementary Dataset 1).
Comparison between phi3Ts and SPβ revealed that the first lacks putative repressor gene yonR as well as immunity-encoding gene yomJ what could explain spontaneous release of phage particles (Supplementary Fig. 2B).
Strains lysogenic for hybrid prophages produce virulent hybrid phages
To examine which phage variants were released into the medium [43], phage-containing supernatants were spotted onto the lawn on Δ6 strain (derivative of 168 strain deprived of prophage elements [54]), followed by purification of phages from single plaques and sequencing (see Materials and Methods). Notably, each evolved strain produced a mix of turbid and clear plaques (Supplementary Fig. 1C). Turbid plaques are typical for temperate phages (like SPβ or phi3T), while clear plaques are usually formed by phages that have lost their lysogenic cycle [66]. Sequencing revealed that the spontaneously produced phages were either phi3Ts or phi3Ts-SPβ hybrids (Fig. 1c, Supplementary Fig. 1A, Fig. 2a). All phages obtained from the turbid plaques could also be identified within genomes of the evolved strains (Fig. 1c, Supplementary Fig. 1A, Fig. 2a). In addition, the genome of Hyb1phi3Ts-SPβ (released by B310mA) was extended by a ~1.2 kb fragment of the host chromosome (yozE, yokU, and part of the kamA gene), indicating specialized transduction, a process that occurs when a phage picks up a fragment of host chromosomal DNA in the immediate vicinity of its attachment site (Figs. 1c, 2a). In contrast to the turbid plaque-creating phages, all phages obtained from clear plaques were phi3Ts-SPβ hybrids, which were not present on the chromosomes of their corresponding producers (Fig. 1c, Supplementary Fig. 1A, Fig. 2a) suggesting they were virulent phi3Ts-SPβ variants. We could also identify a variety of extrachromosomal phage DNA (epDNA) fragments ranging from 10.9 to 66 kb (Fig. 2b, Supplementary dataset 1, Supplementary Table 4). The epDNA was dominated by phi3Ts-SPβ recombinants, in which DNA from the two parental phages was joined at the homologous region (Fig. 2b). We identified 16 unique recombination sites (epDNA and hybrid phages combined), 15 of each were at regions of phi3Ts-SPβ homology, mostly focused around the left arm of phi3Ts/initial part of SPβ in B. subtilis chromosome (Fig. 2b, Supplementary Table 4). A single nonhomologous recombination site was found between a region following yosA gene of SPβ and unknown phi3Ts gene (Fig. 2b, Supplementary Table 4).
Although none of the hybrid epDNA was identical to sequences of hybrid phages released by the corresponding strains, certain homologous recombination sites in Hyb2phi3Ts-SPβ and Hyb3phi3Ts-SPβ were overlapping with these found in epDNA (Fig. 2, Supplementary Table 4). Finally, we also noticed that some epDNA fragments contained parts of the bacterial chromosome adjacent to the phi3Ts integration site, again pointing toward specialized transduction (Fig. 2b, Supplementary Table 4).
A sporulation selection regime promotes foreign phage invasion
Next, we aimed to identify the source of phi3Ts DNA in the evolved host genomes. First, we repeated the mapping of raw sequencing reads from the B. subtilis 168 ancestral genome onto selected unique phi3Ts regions. Indeed, phi3Ts DNA was present in the ancestor strain at a very low but detectable level (Fig. 3, Supplementary Fig. 3A). On the other hand, phi3Ts could be clearly detected by mapping of sequencing reads of the evolved strains (Supplementary Fig. 3A).
This result was additionally confirmed by PCR (Supplementary Fig. 4). As expected, the evolved strains B310mA and B410wtB, where integration of phi3Ts into kamA locus was confirmed by genome sequencing (Fig. 1c, Supplementary Fig. 1A), were negative for intact kamA, while B410mB gave a weak product, despite similar integration of phi3Ts (Supplementary Fig. 1A), what could be explained by incorporation of kamA into its epDNA (Fig. 2b, Supplementary Fig. 4A).
The above analysis indicates that low copy number phi3Ts was present in the B. subtilis 168 stock from the start. Since B. subtilis 168 has been shared among research labs around the world, phi3Ts could also be ‘hiding’ in culture stocks of other research labs. Accidental detection of such low copy number phage DNA is nearly impossible, because (i) sequencing reads matching phi3Ts would be filtered out during standard mapping pipelines, and (ii) phi3Ts appears to only multiply and manifest itself under specific selection regimes. To check for possible contamination of other B. subtilis stocks with phi3Ts, we mapped raw sequencing data available in the NCBI database to the phi3T genome (KY030782.1), but found no evidence of phi3Ts contamination (Supplementary Fig 3B). We also PCR-screened a larger collection of B. subtilis 168 stocks from different labs around the world [67] for the presence of phi3Ts and obtained a very strong positive result for B. subtilis 168 ‘Newcastle’, suggesting that this strain was lysogenized by phi3Ts, or a very similar prophage (Supplementary Fig. 4B). We also confirmed that, the Newcastle 168 strain contained the ‘s’ fragment, a unique sequence allowing the phi3Ts phage to be distinguished from the previously sequenced phi3T (Fig. 1d).
As phi3Ts multiplies under a prolonged sporulation selection regime, we contacted colleagues who also performed experimental evolution with B. subtilis strains imposing the same or similar selection [45, 50]. A group from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, agreed to share raw sequencing data obtained from 12 evolved single isolates. We did not find any mutations within prophage regions (Supplementary dataset 2) nor phi3T-specific DNA fragments in the raw sequencing data (see Materials and Methods; Supplementary Fig. 5).
We also approached a group from the University of Groningen, who performed experimental evolution of B. subtilis 168 under nutrient-limited conditions in which bacteria could neither grow nor complete sporulation (due to sigF deletion) [50]. Mapping their raw sequencing reads to the phi3T genome clearly revealed the presence of phi3T-specific reads (Supplementary Fig. 3C). Similar to our case (Fig. 3, Supplementary Fig. 3A), the phage DNA was already present at the start, and it either gradually decreased or increased in two different biological samples (Supplementary Fig. 3C).
The above results suggest that the prophage activation scenario requires not only a sporulation selection regime, but also contamination with low copy number phi3Ts DNA or phage particles. The exchange of strains between Newcastle University (the origin of B. subtilis 168 PCR-positive for the phi3Ts-specific fragment) and the University of Groningen, and later between the University of Groningen and our lab, represents a possible transmission route for phi3Ts.
Finally, the evolution experiment performed previously [43] was repeated under the sporulation selection regime using the undomesticated B. subtilis NCIB 3610 (hereafter 3610) strain in which the presence of phi3Ts DNA could not be detected during analysis of genome sequencing (Supplementary Fig. 3D, Supplementary Fig. 6A) or by PCR (Supplementary Fig. 6B). To our surprise, lytic activity (Supplementary Fig. 7A) and the release of phages (Supplementary Fig. 7) were observed as early as the fourth transfer when the sporulation selection regime was applied. Similarly, targeted PCR analysis of host DNA revealed a gradual increase in the phi3T-specific PCR product and a gradual decrease in the PCR product corresponding to intact kamA (Supplementary Fig. 8). This experiment again demonstrated unsupervised outspread of phi3Ts, taking place solely in populations subjected to sporulation/spore revival selection regime. The latter either facilitates contamination by phi3Ts or propagation of this phage from levels that are beyond PCR or sequencing detection limits.
Foreign phages modulate sporulation dynamics
We next explored whether propagation of low copy number phi3Ts DNA and its integration into the kamA gene has any positive fitness effects on B. subtilis. Since expression of kamA is dramatically increased upon sporulation entry (http://subtiwiki.uni-goettingen.de), we hypothesized that kamA may encode a product that is metabolically costly and/or toxic for the bacterium, hence strains lysogenized by phi3Ts/phi3Ts-SPβ hybrid prophage lysogen may benefit from inactivation of this gene (Supplementary Fig. 9A). However, competition assays between wild-type vs. ΔkamA strains with and without sporulation selection revealed no difference in performance between strains (Supplementary Fig. 9B).
Next, we examined the sporulation and spore revival dynamics of B. subtilis 3610 lyzogenized by phi3T, available from the Bacillus genetic stock center. We observed that the phi3T lysogen sporulated prematurely compared with the wild-type strain (Fig. 4). We also observed a general trend indicative of better revival of the phi3T lysogen (Supplementary Fig. 10A), which may include contributions from faster germination (Supplementary Fig. 10B) and/or an altered frequency of premature germination during dormancy (Supplementary Fig. 10C). These results suggest that the spread of phi3Ts might be partly driven by host benefits from the regulatory arsenal associated with phi3Ts and its hybrids.
Notably, sporulation regulators have been previously linked to mobile genetic elements (MGEs) in this species [68,69,70]. Annotation of phi3Ts and phi3Ts-SPβ hybrids (see Materials and Methods) revealed the presence of several genes that could modulate sporulation or spore traits. Specifically, we found a gene (labelled as rapX) encoding a putative Rap phosphatase (Supplementary Fig. 2A, Supplementary Table 5) sharing high amino acid sequence identify with RapA (unique for phi3Ts) that is known to modulate sporulation timing [71]. We also found that the ‘s’ phi3Ts marker sequence may encode stationary phase survival protein YuiC (100% confidence Phyre prediction = 100% confidence), hence we labelled this sequence spsX (Supplementary Fig. 2A). Indeed, overexpression of spsX from ectopic locus resulted in small but significant increase in percent of early spores as well as faster germination of B. subtilis NCBI 3610 (Supplementary Fig. 11).
In addition, we identified sspC that controls spore resistance traits and encodes an acid-soluble protein involved in spore DNA protection (present on both SPβ and phi3Ts) [72]. Therefore, phi3T/phi3Ts may encode proteins that influence the B. subtilis life cycle during sporulation and spore revival.
Recombination between SPβ-like prophages takes place on global and local ecological scales
To understand the ecological relevance of extensive phage recombination observed under a sporulation selection regime, we analyzed prophage elements within the B. subtilis clade including B. cereus for comparison of more distant species (see Materials and Methods) (Supplementary dataset 3). We immediately identified a cluster of rather large (>100 kb) prophages integrated close to the replication terminus, just like phi3Ts, SPβ or phi3Ts-SPβ hybrids. These large prophages were found in 78 out of a total of 320 genomes, mainly (86%; 67/78) within representatives of B. subtilis (34/78), B. velezensis (17/78). B. amyloliquefaciens (10/78) and B. licheniformis (6/78) species (Fig. 5a, Supplementary Dataset 3, Supplementary Fig. 12).
We further identified 23 strains in which large prophages split the spsM gene in a manner identical to SPβ (Supplementary Dataset 3), and four B. subtilis isolates in which the kamA gene was split by a prophage at exactly like observed in the our evolved strains lysogenized by hybrid phages (Supplementary Dataset 3). In the remaining Bacillus strains, the large prophages were mostly integrated close to sporulation-related genes (Supplementary Dataset 3). Interestingly, ten strains carried extrachromosomal phage DNA (as predicted by Phaster; Supplementary Dataset 3), and in one of them (B. subtilis SRCM103612) this epDNA was a truncated version of an SPβ-like prophage present within the chromosome (Fig. 5b). The SRCM103612 prophage contained regions sharing homology to both SPβ and phi3Ts, indicating recombination and an unstable lysogenic cycle within SPβ-like recombinant phages in natural B. subtilis isolates (Fig. 5b).
To access the natural diversity of large SPβ-like prophages, we collected Bacillus sp. genomes carrying a large prophage splitting spsM or kamA. Notably, such prophage was present in roughly 39% of all unique B. subtilis genomes available (28 out of 72). We compared the phylogenetic tree obtained for these host strains (see Materials and Methods) with the phylogenetic tree obtained for their SPβ-like prophages (Fig. 6a, b). The strains could be divided into six phylogenetic clades (Fig. 6a), while prophages clustered into three clades: ‘conservative’, ‘hybrid’ and ‘diverse’. The ‘conservative’ clade comprised prophages that were nearly identical to SPβ, all residing within closely related B. subtilis strains (Fig. 6a, b). The ‘hybrid’ clade comprised phi3T, phi3Ts and all phi3Ts-SPβ hybrids that evolved in the above described experiments (Fig. 6b). Within the ‘diverse’ clade the prophage relatedness did not match the phylogenetic relatedness of the hosts (Fig. 6a, b). Here, we found that among B. subtilis isolates from the same soil sample below the mushroom [73], one strain (MB8_B7) carried an spsM-integrated SPβ prophage, one strain (MB8_B1) carried a SPβ-like prophage in spsM, and one strain (MB8_B10) carried an SPβ-like prophage in kamA (Fig. 6a, b). Notably, all members of the ‘conservative’ clade carried an intact copy of ICEBs1 that was shown to block the SPβ lytic cycle [44], while this element is missing in all members of the ‘diverse’ clade (Fig. 6b). Like phi3Ts and phi3Ts-SPβ hybrid phages, several representatives of the ‘diverse’ cluster lacked the putative repressor gene yonR, which was present in all members of the ‘conservative’ cluster (Fig. 6b, Supplementary Dataset 3). Finally, we could clearly see modules sharing high homology with SPβ and phi3T in the large prophages (Fig. 6c). These results are consistent with our lab data showing that SPβ-like phages diversify in nature, and this diversification may be constrained by other MGEs present on the host chromosome and facilitated by loss of repressor gene through homologous recombination.
Discussion
The importance of phages in the ecology and evolution of bacteria is indisputable. Genome comparison suggests that prophage elements undergo pervasive domestication within their hosts that gradually lose the ability to reproduce via the lytic cycle [74]. Our current work demonstrates an opposite scenario, where after a prolonged sporulation/spore revival selection regime, a latent prophage of B. subtilis (SPβ) [43, 44] regains its lytic reproductive cycle via recombination with ‘foreign’ phage DNA (phi3Ts). Prophage recombination did not occur in the absence of sporulation/spore revival selection regime, as evident from our previous experimental evolution studies [75, 76], as well as this work (Supplementary Fig. 7).
The fact that phi3Ts only manifests itself under specific conditions (a prolonged sporulation/spore revival selection regime) is reminiscent of previously described examples of Proteobacteria phages [77, 78]. Specifically, the lytic phage SW1 can thrive undetected within E. coli populations, but manifests itself in spontaneous plaque formation after overexpression of a putative methylase from an indigenous cryptic prophage [77]. Likewise, lytic variants of P22 spontaneously form upon purine starvation of the Salmonella typhimurium host [78]. It was later realized that P22 coexists with its host in so-called carrier state, when extrachromosomal phage is asymmetrically inherited by only one of the sibling cells after cell division, resulting in coexistence of resistant and susceptible host populations [79, 80]. Similar mechanism could maintain low amount of phi3Ts within B. subtilis population.
Identification of phi3Ts and phi3Ts-SPβ hybrids within B. subtilis populations evolved under sporulation/spore revival selection regime, sheds new light on our previous work, that changes within SPβ regions specifically promote the spread of biofilm-deficient strains in the population [43]. Present study reveals that while biofilm-proficient strain (B410wtB) still carries intact phi3Ts and SPβ at different loci, biofilm-deficient strains (B310mA and and B410mB) are lysogenized by phi3Ts-SPβ hybrids, what also results in genome deletion (Fig. 1c, Supplementary Fig. 1A), offering a potential explanation for fitness advantage of these strains. It remains to be tested whether biofilm-deficiency is linked to the likelihood of phi3Ts-SPβ recombination.
Exactly how sporulation promotes the spread of ‘foreign’ phage and its hybrid derivatives requires further molecular studies. There are two, not mutually exclusive, hypotheses: (a) induction of the phage lytic cycle in a small fraction of sporulating cells leads to rapid spread of phi3Ts within the population, infection of phi3Ts-susceptible sporulating cells, segregation of phage DNA into forespores, and trapping of many of its copies in spores, followed by the release of phages upon germination, as observed previously for lytic B. subtilis phages [81, 82]; (b) since phi3T lysogeny (KY030782.1; 99.98% sequence identity with phi3Ts) [65] results in earlier sporulation and potentially improved spore quality, integration of this phage into the chromosome may be adaptive for the host. As the functions of most phi3Ts genes are obscure, it is difficult to identify the potential phage-encoded regulatory genes that could affect the host life cycle. We show that spsX gene could be one possible candidate modulating sporulation and spore revival timing. Another suspect was rap-phr cassette (matching rap present in phi3T and phi3Ts) that have been previously found within other MGEs of B. subtilis, and have been shown to modulate the timing of sporulation [68,69,70], however we could not detect significant effects of rapX overexpression on sporulation/spore revival timing, contrary to recently hypothesized function of this gene in phi3T [83]. Phi3Ts phage genes (e.g., sspC) could modulate the production of resistant and viable spores [72] and/or reduce sporulation failure and premature germination [84]. In addition, the spore revival traits of lysogens may also be indirectly affected by the modulation of sporulation timing [53]. Whatever the exact molecular mechanism and its evolutionary driver, the activation of latent prophage elements upon sporulation/spore revival treatment expands the intriguing connections between sporulation of Firmicutes and phages infecting and lysogenizing these species [31, 37, 42, 85,86,87].
Based on comparison of the sizes and integration sites of prophage elements within Bacillus sp., SPβ and phi3T clearly belong to a distinct prophage group. These phages appear extremely large (2−3-fold larger than average prophages), and they possess sophisticated communication systems that are potentially capable of sensing the frequency of lysogenized hosts [65, 88] or biosynthetic gene clusters [89, 90], and functional genes related to host dormancy [91, 92]. A high level of homology between SPβ and phi3Ts offers extensive regions for homologous recombination, which can be additionally promoted by the recombination machinery involved in natural competence [93] and in non-homologous end-joining repair [94]. It appears that the absence of other MGEs (e.g., ICEBs1) constraining the phage lytic cycle [44] may also correlate with a higher level of phage diversification. It is possible that such phage recombination could be facilitated by regulatory excision of SPβ from the chromosome in the sporulating mother cell [31, 95].
Our work shows how large SPβ-like prophages of Bacilli pervasively recombine during sporulation, providing new model system to study bacterial evolution in which phages serve as an evolutionary driving force. These observations shed new light on the interplay between bacteria and their phages; while temperate phages commonly undergo domestication [74], they may easily regain genetic mobility by recombination with other phages, thereby altering the physiology, social interactions and evolution of their hosts. The crucial impact of prophage elements on ecological interactions within closely related strains has already been demonstrated for other species [7, 77, 96, 97]. Herein, we showed that such antagonism emerges during the early steps of phage diversification, which suggesting that speciation of prophage elements may be the first step toward speciation of host bacteria.
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Acknowledgements
The authors thank M. Kilstrup, P. Sazinas, K. Middleboe, D. Castillio and P. Stefanic for their valuable comments. We are profoundly grateful to O. Kuipers, A. de Jong and W. Overkamp from University of Groningen, for sharing their raw sequencing data and all relevant information, which allowed us to finalize the paper. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 713683 (H.C. Ørsted COFUND to AD), Individual grant from Friedrich Schiller University Jena to support postdoc researchers to AD, and supported by the Danish National Research Foundation (DNRF137) for the Center for Microbial Secondary Metabolites. Funded in part by NIH R01GM121865 to BMB.
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AD and ATK designed the study. AD, PB, ZH, CK performed experiments. AD and MLS performed bioinformatics analysis. PK performed electron microscopy, GM performed genome sequencing and analyzed the data, BB and BMB shared sequencing data. AD wrote the paper. All authors contributed to final version of the paper.
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Dragoš, A., Priyadarshini, B., Hasan, Z. et al. Pervasive prophage recombination occurs during evolution of spore-forming Bacilli. ISME J 15, 1344–1358 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-020-00854-1
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