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Evaluation of the Antimicrobial Potential and Characterization of Novel T7-Like Erwinia Bacteriophages.


ABSTRACT: The recent outbreak of blight in pome fruit plants has been a major concern as there are two indistinguishable Erwinia species, Erwinia amylovora and E. pyrifoliae, which cause blight in South Korea. Although there is a strict management protocol consisting of antibiotic-based prevention, the area and the number of cases of outbreaks have increased. In this study, we isolated four bacteriophages, pEp_SNUABM_03, 04, 11, and 12, that infect both E. amylovora and E. pyrifoliae and evaluated their potential as antimicrobial agents for administration against Erwinia-originated blight in South Korea. Morphological analysis revealed that all phages had podovirus-like capsids. The phage cocktail showed a broad spectrum of infectivity, infecting 98.91% of E. amylovora and 100% of E. pyrifoliae strains. The antibacterial effect was observed after long-term cocktail treatment against E. amylovora, whereas it was observed for both short- and long-term treatments against E. pyrifoliae. Genomic analysis verified that the phages did not encode harmful genes such as antibiotic resistance or virulence genes. All phages were stable under general orchard conditions. Collectively, we provided basic data on the potential of phages as biocontrol agents that target both E. amylovora and E. pyrifoliae.

SUBMITTER: Jo SJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9953017 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Evaluation of the Antimicrobial Potential and Characterization of Novel T7-Like <i>Erwinia</i> Bacteriophages.

Jo Su Jin SJ   Kim Sang Guen SG   Lee Young Min YM   Giri Sib Sankar SS   Kang Jeong Woo JW   Lee Sung Bin SB   Jung Won Joon WJ   Hwang Mae Hyun MH   Park Jaehong J   Cheng Chi C   Roh Eunjung E   Park Se Chang SC  

Biology 20230123 2


The recent outbreak of blight in pome fruit plants has been a major concern as there are two indistinguishable <i>Erwinia</i> species, <i>Erwinia amylovora</i> and <i>E. pyrifoliae</i>, which cause blight in South Korea. Although there is a strict management protocol consisting of antibiotic-based prevention, the area and the number of cases of outbreaks have increased. In this study, we isolated four bacteriophages, pEp_SNUABM_03, 04, 11, and 12, that infect both <i>E. amylovora</i> and <i>E. p  ...[more]

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