6533b823fe1ef96bd127f789

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Black box of phage–bacterium interactions : exploring alternative phage infection strategies

Elina LaantoElina LaantoHanna M. OksanenSari Susanna MäntynenSari Susanna MäntynenSamuel L. Díaz-muñozMinna M. Poranen

subject

Phage therapyviruksetQH301-705.5medicine.medical_treatmentImmunologyReviewGenetic pathwaysinfektiotGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologybakteriofagitbakteeritBacteriophagepseudolysogeny03 medical and health sciencesbacteriophagemedicineBacteriophagescarrier stateBiology (General)LysogenyReview ArticlesEcosystem030304 developmental biologyConfusion0303 health sciencesbiologyBacteria030306 microbiologyGeneral NeuroscienceCarrier statebiology.organism_classificationchronic infectionReview articlephage infectionChronic infectionEvolutionary biologyEvolutionary ecologyPersistent Infectionmikrobiologiamedicine.symptom

description

The canonical lytic–lysogenic binary has been challenged in recent years, as more evidence has emerged on alternative bacteriophage infection strategies. These infection modes are little studied, and yet they appear to be more abundant and ubiquitous in nature than previously recognized, and can play a significant role in the ecology and evolution of their bacterial hosts. In this review, we discuss the extent, causes and consequences of alternative phage lifestyles, and clarify conceptual and terminological confusion to facilitate research progress. We propose distinct definitions for the terms ‘pseudolysogeny’ and ‘productive or non-productive chronic infection’, and distinguish them from the carrier state life cycle, which describes a population-level phenomenon. Our review also finds that phages may change their infection modes in response to environmental conditions or the physiological state of the host cell. We outline known molecular mechanisms underlying the alternative phage–host interactions, including specific genetic pathways and their considerable biotechnological potential. Moreover, we discuss potential implications of the alternative phage lifestyles for microbial biology and ecosystem functioning, as well as applied topics such as phage therapy.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202109234952