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      Recombination and microdiversity in coastal marine cyanophages.

      1 ,
      Environmental microbiology

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          Abstract

          Genetic exchange is an important process in bacteriophage evolution. Here, we examine the role of homologous recombination in the divergence of closely related cyanophage isolates from natural marine populations. Four core-viral genes (coliphage T4 homologues g20, g23, g43 and a putative tail fibre gene) and four viral-encoded bacterial-derived genes (psbA, psbD, cobS and phoH) were analysed for 60 cyanophage isolates belonging to five Rhode Island Myovirus (RIM) strains. Phylogenetic analysis of the 60 concatenated sequences revealed well-resolved sequence clusters corresponding to the RIM strain designations. Viral isolates within a strain shared an average nucleotide identity of 99.3-99.8%. Nevertheless, extensive microdiversity was observed within each cyanophage strain; only three of the 60 isolates shared the same nucleotide haplotype. Microdiversity was generated by point mutations, homologous recombination within a strain, and intragenic recombination between RIM strains. Intragenic recombination events between distinct RIM strains were detected most often in host-derived photosystem II psbA and psbD genes, but were also identified in some major capsid protein g23 genes. Within a strain, more variability was observed at the psbA locus than at any of the other seven loci. Although most of the microdiversity within a strain was neutral, some amino acid substitutions were identified, and thus microdiversity within strains has the potential to influence the population dynamics of viral-host interactions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Environ. Microbiol.
          Environmental microbiology
          1462-2920
          1462-2912
          Nov 2009
          : 11
          : 11
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Biology and Marine Biology, Roger Williams University, Bristol, RI 02809, USA. mmarston@rwu.edu
          Article
          EMI2037
          10.1111/j.1462-2920.2009.02037.x
          19691502
          acbb448d-a8e1-4534-be13-cac848447f42
          History

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