Bacteriophage Medical Research Center, Department of Biology, The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC, USA.
mBio. 2021 Jun 29;12(3):e0136121. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01361-21. Epub 2021 Jun 22.
Bacteria and bacteriophages (phages) have evolved potent defense and counterdefense mechanisms that allowed their survival and greatest abundance on Earth. CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat)-Cas (CRISPR-associated) is a bacterial defense system that inactivates the invading phage genome by introducing double-strand breaks at targeted sequences. While the mechanisms of CRISPR defense have been extensively investigated, the counterdefense mechanisms employed by phages are poorly understood. Here, we report a novel counterdefense mechanism by which phage T4 restores the genomes broken by CRISPR cleavages. Catalyzed by the phage-encoded recombinase UvsX, this mechanism pairs very short stretches of sequence identity (minihomology sites), as few as 3 or 4 nucleotides in the flanking regions of the cleaved site, allowing replication, repair, and stitching of genomic fragments. Consequently, a series of deletions are created at the targeted site, making the progeny genomes completely resistant to CRISPR attack. Our results demonstrate that this is a general mechanism operating against both type II (Cas9) and type V (Cas12a) CRISPR-Cas systems. These studies uncovered a new type of counterdefense mechanism evolved by T4 phage where subtle functional tuning of preexisting DNA metabolism leads to profound impact on phage survival. Bacteriophages (phages) are viruses that infect bacteria and use them as replication factories to assemble progeny phages. Bacteria have evolved powerful defense mechanisms to destroy the invading phages by severing their genomes soon after entry into cells. We discovered a counterdefense mechanism evolved by phage T4 to stitch back the broken genomes and restore viral infection. In this process, a small amount of genetic material is deleted or another mutation is introduced, making the phage resistant to future bacterial attack. The mutant virus might also gain survival advantages against other restriction conditions or DNA damaging events. Thus, bacterial attack not only triggers counterdefenses but also provides opportunities to generate more fit phages. Such defense and counterdefense mechanisms over the millennia led to the extraordinary diversity and the greatest abundance of bacteriophages on Earth. Understanding these mechanisms will open new avenues for engineering recombinant phages for biomedical applications.
细菌和噬菌体(噬菌体)进化出强大的防御和反击防御机制,使它们在地球上得以生存和大量存在。CRISPR(成簇的规律间隔的短回文重复序列)-Cas(CRISPR 相关)是一种细菌防御系统,通过在靶向序列处引入双链断裂来使入侵噬菌体基因组失活。虽然已经广泛研究了 CRISPR 防御的机制,但噬菌体所采用的反击防御机制还了解甚少。在这里,我们报告了一种新型的反击防御机制,噬菌体 T4 通过该机制修复被 CRISPR 切割破坏的基因组。该机制由噬菌体编码的重组酶 UvsX 催化,该机制在切割位点侧翼区域的短序列同源性位点(最小同源性位点)之间配对,短至 3 或 4 个核苷酸,从而允许复制、修复和拼接基因组片段。因此,在靶向位点处会产生一系列缺失,使子代基因组完全抵抗 CRISPR 攻击。我们的研究结果表明,这是一种针对 II 型(Cas9)和 V 型(Cas12a)CRISPR-Cas 系统的通用机制。这些研究揭示了 T4 噬菌体进化出的一种新的反击防御机制,其中对现有 DNA 代谢的微妙功能调整会对噬菌体的生存产生深远影响。
噬菌体是感染细菌并利用它们作为复制工厂组装子代噬菌体的病毒。细菌进化出了强大的防御机制,一旦噬菌体进入细胞,就会立即切断其基因组以摧毁入侵的噬菌体。我们发现噬菌体 T4 进化出了一种反击防御机制,将断裂的基因组缝合回去并恢复病毒感染。在此过程中,会删除或引入少量遗传物质,使噬菌体对未来的细菌攻击具有抗性。突变病毒也可能在其他限制条件或 DNA 损伤事件中获得生存优势。因此,细菌的攻击不仅引发了反击防御,还为产生更适应的噬菌体提供了机会。这些防御和反击防御机制在数千年的时间里导致了地球上噬菌体的非凡多样性和最大丰度。了解这些机制将为生物医学应用的重组噬菌体工程开辟新途径。