Abstract
Monitoring the complex transmission dynamics of a bacterial virus (temperate phage P22) throughout a population of its host (Salmonella Typhimurium) at single cell resolution revealed the unexpected existence of a transiently immune subpopulation of host cells that emerged from peculiarities preceding the process of lysogenization. More specifically, an infection event ultimately leading to a lysogen first yielded a phage carrier cell harboring a polarly tethered P22 episome. Upon subsequent division, the daughter cell inheriting this episome became lysogenized by an integration event yielding a prophage, while the other daughter cell became P22-free. However, since the phage carrier cell was shown to overproduce immunity factors that are cytoplasmically inherited by the P22-free daughter cell and further passed down to its siblings, a transiently resistant subpopulation was generated that upon dilution of these immunity factors again became susceptible to P22 infection. The iterative emergence and infection of transiently resistant subpopulations suggests a new bet-hedging strategy by which viruses could manage to sustain both vertical and horizontal transmission routes throughout an infected population without compromising a stable co-existence with their host.
Publication types
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Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
MeSH terms
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Bacteriophage P22 / genetics
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Bacteriophage P22 / immunology*
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Bacteriophage P22 / pathogenicity*
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Chromosomes / metabolism
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Cytoplasm / genetics
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Cytoplasm / immunology
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Host-Pathogen Interactions / immunology
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Membrane Proteins / genetics
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Membrane Proteins / immunology
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Membrane Proteins / metabolism
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Mutation
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Salmonella typhimurium / genetics
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Salmonella typhimurium / immunology*
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Salmonella typhimurium / virology*
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Single-Cell Analysis
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Viral Proteins / genetics
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Viral Proteins / immunology
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Viral Proteins / metabolism
Substances
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Membrane Proteins
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Viral Proteins
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sieA protein, Enterobacteria phage P22
Grants and funding
This work was supported by doctoral fellowships from the KU Leuven Interfaculty Council for Development Co-operation (IRO, to AM) and from the Flemish Agency for Innovation by Science and Technology (IWT-Vlaanderen; to SKG), by a postdoctoral fellowship from the KU Leuven Research Fund (to WC; PDMK/14/138), and through grants from the KU Leuven Research Fund (CREA/09/017, IDO/10/012, GOA/15/006) and the Research Foundation of Flanders (FWO-Vlaanderen; Grant G.0599.11). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.