Characterization and genomic analysis of two Aeromonas phages
Li ling Jiang, Chang Liu, Guang feng Liu, Xiu hua Tao, Hong Sai Zhang, Yue Zhang, Yuyu Chen, Meng yao Li, Jing zhe Jiang, Hong peng Chen

TL;DR
This paper describes the discovery and analysis of two new phages that can infect harmful bacteria in water, which could help control bacterial diseases in aquaculture.
Contribution
The study isolates and characterizes two novel Aeromonas phages and classifies them into two new viral genera.
Findings
Phages C3 and C4 have unique genome sizes and G+C contents, and belong to two new viral genera.
Both phages show strong antibacterial effects under specific conditions and have good stability across varying temperatures and pH.
C3 and C4 have distinct latent periods and burst sizes, indicating their potential for use in controlling bacterial infections.
Abstract
Phages, as viruses that specifically infect certain bacteria, have great research value in the prevention and control of bacterial diseases. Bacteria of the genus Aeromonas are widely distributed in aquatic environments and are important zoonotic pathogens that can cause a variety of diseases. In this study, two virulent phages, AhC3_1 and AsC4_1, were successfully isolated using bacteria from the genus Aeromonas. The evolutionary relationships of the two phages were analyzed using methods such as phylogenetic analysis and average amino acid identity (AAI) analysis, and their biological characteristics were assessed through approaches including one-step growth curve assay and temperature tolerance testing. The results showed that the genome sequences of phages C3 and C4 were 232,884 bp and 45,983 bp in length, respectively, with G + C contents of 44.36% and 50.11%. Both belong to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBacteriophages and microbial interactions · Aquaculture disease management and microbiota · Animal Virus Infections Studies
