A new Streptomyces scabies-infecting bacteriophage from Egypt with promising biocontrol traits

In this study, a novel bacteriophage with high lytic efficacy against S. scabies was isolated from a potato field at El-Minya, Egypt, and was designated SscP1EGY. The phage has an icosahedral head of 55 nm and a short tail of 7.5 nm, typical of a podovirus. Its infection cycle was 90 min, including 50 min of latent time and 40 min of rise period with a burst size of approximately 200 PFU per infected cell. The genome of SscP1EGY consists 51,751 nucleotides with 76 predicted genes. SscP1EGY infected and completely lysed seven tested S. scabies strains but showed no lytic activity against three beneficial Streptomyces species, other beneficial bacterial species, and non-target plant pathogenic bacteria. In greenhouse experiments, treatment of S. scabies-inoculated potato tubers with phage SscP1EGY resulted in reductions of (1) the severity of scab, (2) the number of lesions, and (3) the percentage of lesion surface, as compared to the inoculated tubers without phage treatment. Also, scab lesions appeared superficial in phage-treated tubers but pitted in non-phage-treated tubers. Our results suggest that SscP1EGY has a potential as a biological control agent for S. scabies. Based on our knowledge, SscP1EGY is the first sequenced S. scabies-infecting phage in Egypt.PMID:34091692 | DOI:10.1007/s00203-021-02415-2
Source: Archives of Microbiology - Category: Microbiology Authors: Source Type: research