%0 Journal Article %T Mycobacteriophage-drived diversification of Mycobacterium abscessus %+ Unité de Recherche sur les Maladies Infectieuses et Tropicales Emergentes (URMITE) %+ Institut de Mathématiques de Marseille (I2M) %A Sassi, Mohamed %A Gouret, Philippe %A Chabrol, Olivier %A Pontarotti, Pierre %A Drancourt, Michel %< avec comité de lecture %@ 1745-6150 %J Biology Direct %I BioMed Central %V 9 %N 1 %P 19 %8 2014 %D 2014 %R 10.1186/1745-6150-9-19 %M 25224692 %K Mycobacterium abscessus %K Mycobacterium bolletii %K Mycobacterium massiliense %K Prophages %K Mycobacteriophages %Z Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriology %Z Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity %Z Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology, environment/Symbiosis %Z Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE] %Z Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/VirologyJournal articles %X Background: Mycobacterium abscessus is an emerging opportunistic pathogen which diversity was acknowledged by the recent description of two subspecies accommodating M. abscessus, Mycobacterium bolletii and Mycobacterium massiliense isolates.Results: Here, genome analysis found 1–8 prophage regions in 47/48 M. abscessus genomes ranging from small prophage-like elements to complete prophages. A total of 20,304 viral and phage proteins clustered into 853 orthologous groups. Phylogenomic and phylogenetic analyses based on prophage region homology found three main clusters corresponding to M. abscessus, M. bolletii and M. massiliense. Analysing 135 annotated Tape Measure Proteins found thirteen clusters and four singletons, suggesting that at least 17 mycobacteriophages had infected M. abscessus during its evolution. The evolutionary history of phages differed from that of their mycobacterial hosts. In particular, 33 phage-related proteins have been horizontally transferred within M. abscessus genomes. They comprise of an integrase, specific mycobacteriophage proteins, hypothetical proteins and DNA replication and metabolism proteins. Gene exchanges, loss and gains which occurred in M. abscessus genomes have been driven by several mycobacteriophages.Conclusions: This analysis of phage-mycobacterium co-evolution suggests that mycobacteriophages are playing a key-role in the on-going diversification of M. abscessus. %G English %2 https://hal.science/hal-01304426/document %2 https://hal.science/hal-01304426/file/1745-6150-9-19.pdf %L hal-01304426 %U https://hal.science/hal-01304426 %~ IRD %~ CNRS %~ UNIV-AMU %~ EC-MARSEILLE %~ GIP-BE %~ I2M %~ I2M-2014-