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In This Article

  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Protocol
  • Representative Results
  • Discussion
  • Acknowledgements
  • Materials
  • References
  • Reprints and Permissions

Summary

Bacteriophages (phages), viruses that infect bacteria, are an integral component of the gut microbiome. Though these symbiotic inhabitants drive bacterial fitness and population dynamics, little is understood about how they impact gut homeostasis and disease. This protocol studies isolated T4 phages within a mouse model, adaptable to other phage-bacterial pairs.

Abstract

Bacteriophages (phages) are viruses that infect bacteria with species- and strain-level specificity and are the most abundant biological entities across all known ecosystems. Within bacterial communities, such as those found in the gut microbiota, phages are implicated in regulating microbiota population dynamics and driving bacterial evolution. There has been renewed interest in phage research in the last decade, in part due to the host-specific killing capabilities of lytic phages, which offer a promising tool to counter the increasing threat of antimicrobial resistant bacteria. Furthermore, recent studies demonstrating that phages adhere to intestinal mucus suggest they may have a protective role in preventing bacterial invasion into the underlying epithelium. Importantly, like bacterial microbiomes, disrupted phageomes have been associated with worsened outcomes in diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease. Previous studies have demonstrated that phages can modulate the microbiome of animals and humans through fecal filtrate transplants, benefiting the host's health. With this recent wave of research comes the necessity to establish and standardize protocols for studying phages in the context of the gut microbiome. This protocol provides a set of procedures to study isolated T4 phages and their bacterial host, Escherichia coli, in the context of the murine gastrointestinal tract. The methods described here outline how to start from a phage lysate, administer it to mice and assess effects on bacterial host and phage levels. This protocol can be modified and applied to other phage-bacterial pairs and provides a starting point for studying host-phage dynamics in vivo.

Introduction

Bacteriophages, or phages, are viruses that infect and kill bacteria with species and strain-level specificity1. Phages play important roles within complex bacterial communities such as the gut microbiota, where they have been implicated in regulating population dynamics and driving bacterial fitness2. Throughout the last decade, there has been renewed interest in phage research owing to the rise of antimicrobial resistant pathogens3, and the potential for phage therapy as an alternative treatment strategy. In recent years, lytic phage cocktails have been used intravenously with some success in se....

Protocol

All experiments were conducted in accordance with the guidelines established by the UBC Animal Care Committee and Biosafety Committee-approved protocols (A23-0113, B19-0038). Mice were housed at the University of British Columbia under pathogen-free conditions at the Center for Disease Modelling. C57BL/6 mice were bred within the facility in a sterile flexible film isolator, provided with sterile mouse diet, water, bedding, and nesting material. The mice were maintained on a 12 h day/night cycle. Experimental mice, both .......

Representative Results

To investigate the interactions between the T4 phage/E. coli dyad in the murine intestine, T4 phage and vehicle lysates were prepared, cleaned, and purified (Figure 1A). T4 phage lysates were titered by plaque assay and diluted to 2 x 107 pfu/mL (2 x 106 pfu/mouse) in SM buffer. Vehicle lysates were also titered to confirm no viable phage presence and diluted in the same volume of SM buffer as the T4 phage lysate. Endotoxin levels were quantified in diluted lys.......

Discussion

The study of phages in the microbiome presents a significant challenge compared to their bacterial counterparts. Specifically, phages do not contain a conserved phylogenetic marker common to all phages akin to the 16S and 18S ribosomal subunits that allow for the ease in sequencing and identification of prokaryotic and eukaryotic species, respectively42. However, with advances in next generation sequencing approaches, including increasing read lengths, throughput and decreasing costs, comes the ra.......

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge that the land they performed this research on is the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the xwməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam) Nation. The land it is situated on has always been a place of learning for the Musqueam people, who for millennia have passed on in their culture, history, and traditions from one generation to the next on this site. We encourage others to learn more about the native lands in which they live and work at https://native-land.ca. The authors acknowledge support from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC) Canadian Graduate Scholarships - Master's (N.P.), Michael S....

Materials

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
1-octanol (99%)ThermofisherCAAAA15977-AP
50 ml PES Steriflip Sterile Disposable Vacuum Filter UnitsMillipore Sigma SCGP00525
Agarose (Low-EEO/Multi-Purpose/Molecular Biology Grade)Fisher BioReagents BP160-500
Amicon® 100kDa Ultra-15 centrifugal filter device, Ultracel-100Millipore SigmaUFC910008
BD Microtainer® Tubes, SSTBD Medical365967
Bioexclusion airtight cages (ISO cages) Techiplast1245ISOCAGE
C1000 Touch™ Thermal Cycler with 96-Well Fast Reaction ModuleBioRad1851196
Calcium Chloride Dihydrate (White Crystals to Powder)Fisher BioReagentsBP510-500
Cap Locks For 1.5ML Tube 100/pkAndwin Scientific 16812612
Chloroform (Ethanol as Preservative/Certified ACS)FisherC298-500
Copper coated steel beads (4.5 mm)Crosman Corporation0767
DNeasy Blood & Tissue Kit (50)Thermo Scientific 69504
DreamTaq Green PCR Master Mix (2X)Thermo Scientific K1081
Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) disodium salt solution, for molecular biology, 0.5 M in H2OSigma AldrichE7889
Fisher BioReagents™ Agar, Powder / Flakes, Fisher BioReagents™ Fisher BioreagentsBP1423-500
Fisher BioReagents™ Microbiology Media: LB Broth (Powder) - Lennox Fisher BioreagentsBP1427-500
GeneRuler 100 bp DNA LadderThermo Scientific SM0241
Green FastMix® qPCR mix, 1250 rxnsQuantaBio95072-012
HEPA filters for isocage lids, AUTOCLAVABLE H14 FILTERS FOR ISO LINE- IRRADIATEDTechiplastUISOHEPAXTBOX-300
Magnesium sulfate heptahydrateFisher BioReagentsBP213-1
MaxQ 6000 Incubated ShakerThermo Scientific 8354-30-0009
Microbiology Media: LB Broth (Powder) - LennoxFisher BioReagentsBP1427-500
Microcentrifuge Tubes with Locking Snap Cap, 2mlFisher14-666-315
Parafilm sealing filmBemisPM-996
Phage stocksCarolina Biological Supply n/a
PicoLab® Mouse Diet 20 EXTLabDiet5R58
Pierce™ Chromogenic Endotoxin Quant KitThermo Scientific A39552S
RNase A (17,500 U)Qiagen19101
RNase-free DNase SetQiagen 79254
Sodium Bicarbonate (Fine White Powder)Fisher ChemicalBP328-500
Sodium Chloride (Crystalline/Certified ACS)Fisher ChemicalS271
Sonicator (probe model CL-18; power source model FB50)Fisher scentific n/a
Sterile flexible film isolator Class Biologically Clean n/a
SYBR™ Safe DNA Gel StainInvitrogenS33102
T100 Thermal Cycler BioRad1861096
T4 phage primer, forward (CCACACATAGCGCGAGTATAA)IDTn/a
T4 phage primer, forward (GAAACTCGGTCAGGCTATCAA)IDTn/a
TissueLyser II Qiagen 85300
Tris-HCl, 1M Solution, pH 8.0, Molecular Biology Grade, UltrapureThermo Scientific AAJ22638AE
Water, (DNASE, RNASE free)Fisher BioReagentsBP2484100

References

  1. Rohwer, F., Segall, A. M. A century of phage lessons. Nature. 528 (7580), 46-47 (2015).
  2. Hsu, B. B., et al. Dynamic modulation of the gut microbiota and metabolome by bacteriophages in a mouse model. C....

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