Despite the availability of massive microbial community data sets (e.g., metagenomes), there is still a lack of knowledge on what molecular mechanisms facilitate cross talk between microbes and prophage within a community context. Despite the availability of massive microbial community data sets (e.g., metagenomes), there is still a lack of knowledge on what molecular mechanisms facilitate cross talk between microbes and prophage within a community context. A study published in mSphere by Jain and colleagues (M. Jain, L. A. Fleites, and D. W. Gabriel, mSphere 2:e00171-17, 2017, https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphereDirect.00171-17 ) reports on an intriguing new twist of how a prophage of the bacterium “ Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” may have its lytic cycle suppressed partly because of a protein that is expressed by a cooccurring bacterium, Wolbachia . Both of these microbes coexist along with other microbial tenants inside their sap-feeding insect host, a psyllid. Although these results are still preliminary and alternative hypotheses need to be tested, these results suggest an interesting new dimension on how regulation of microbial genomes occurs in a community context.
CITATION STYLE
Hansen, A. K., & Skidmore, I. H. (2017). Psyllids, It’s What’s on the Inside That Counts: Community Cross Talk Facilitates Prophage Interactions. MSphere, 2(3). https://doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00227-17
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