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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Development of a novel high throughput method for identifying phage-host pairs in an extreme environment

Olonade, Israel Temiloluwa January 2017 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / There are approximately 10³¹ bacteriophages in the biosphere, outnumbering bacteria 10:1, hence, the dynamic and specific nature of phage-host interactions exerts significant influence on microbial communities. Bacteriophages also represent the reservoir of the highest known genetic diversity making them a potential source of novel biotechnological products. However, the isolation of novel bacteriophages is limited by the observation that less than 1% of bacterial hosts have been cultured. This study aimed to bypass this problem by developing novel culture independent approaches to improve our ability to isolate novel phage-host pairs. Samples were collected from an abandoned copper prospecting site near the Gobabeb Desert Research and Training Station and a Salt lake located in the Swakopmund region of the Namibian desert. Two approaches were explored in this study namely viral tagging and reverse metaviromics. For viral tagging, fluorescently labelling the environmental phage fraction before challenging the environmental bacterial fraction with tagged phages proved difficult. This was most likely due to the complex interaction of the labelling agent with phages and requires further studies. For the reverse metaviromics approach, total DNA from the environmental phage fractions was extracted, sequenced and analyzed for novel phages. Analysis of the phage diversity showed that the copper site was dominated by tailed viruses as has been shown for other extreme arid environments. However, the saline site was atypical of marine environments, with tailed viruses being the most abundant, suggesting that the diversity present is not only driven by salinity. Using the metaviromic sequence data to guide the selection of potential bacterial hosts, two strategies were employed. In the first, putative hosts were predicted based on similarity of phage sequences to those identified in databases. Media targeting these specific genera were employed, 8 bacterial species were isolated and based on 16S rRNA similarity to the closest known species were identified as Halomonas caseinilytica, Halomonas eurihalina, Halomonas sinaiensis, Idiomarina loihiensis, Marinobacter xestospongiae, Virgibacillus salarius and two Salinivibrio species. The 16S rRNA analysis also suggested that H. sinaiensis, V. salarius and both Salinivibrio species are novel. All 8 isolates were challenged with the environmental phage fraction. A novel phage, SMHB1, was isolated on one of the Salinivibrio spp. and is only the second characterized phage ever described for this genus. SMHB1 is a 32 kb myovirus, with a head diameter of 56 nm, and a tail length of 106 nm. The second approach involved the design of fluorescently labelled probes targeting phages identified from the metaviromic sequence data. In a control E. coli system to detect cloned phage DNA fragments, 87% of the interrogated cells showed significant hybridization of the phage specific probe to the target. The optimized method was applied to a simulated environmental bacterial fraction and a detection limit of 1:100 was observed for the bacteria containing the phage DNA fragment of interest. This study demonstrates the possibility of improving the specificity of isolating phage-host pairs in a culture-independent manner by incorporating sequence data in the experimental design; and contributes to our knowledge of the phage diversity of an understudied extreme environment.
2

Phage Fate: Infection Dynamics and Outcomes in a Marine Virus - Host System

Howard-Varona, Cristina January 2015 (has links)
Viruses infecting bacteria (phages) are the most abundant and ubiquitous entities on Earth and likely critical to any ecosystem, as they influence nutrient cycling, mortality and evolution. Ultimately, their impact depends on whether phage—host interactions lead to intracellular phage coexistence (temperate phage) or cell death (lytic phage). Temperate phages in the lysogenic cycle replicate their genome (either integrated into the host chromosome or extrachromosomally), until induced to become lytic, when they create and release progeny via cell lysis. While knowledge on lytic versus lysogenic outcomes is vast, it largely derives from few model systems that underrepresent natural diversity. Further, less is known about the efficiency of phage—host interactions and the regulation of optimal versus sub-optimal lytic infections, which are predicted as relevant under environmental (nutrients, temperature) and host (availability, density) conditions that are common in the ocean. In this dissertation I characterize the phage—host interactions in a new marine model system, phage ϕ38:1 and its Cellulophaga baltica bacterial host, member of the ubiquitous Bacteroidetes phylum. First, I show ϕ38:1’s ability to infect numerous, genetically similar strains of the C. baltica species, two of which display contrasting infection outcomes–lytic versus sub-optimally lytic or lysogenic on the original versus alternative hosts, respectively. Second, I collaboratively apply new gene marker-based approaches (phageFISH and geneELISA) to study ϕ38:1’s infection at the single-cell level and show that it is sub-optimal on the alternative host, rather than lysogenic. Third, I collaboratively develop whole-genome transcriptome datasets for ϕ38:1 infecting both, the optimal and sub-optimal hosts, to characterize the cellular response to infection and hypothesize potential transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation of the sub-optimal infection. Together, these findings advance our knowledge of naturally-occurring phage—host interactions with a focus on nearly-unstudied sub-optimal infections.

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