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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Aug 1997, 3144-3150, Vol 63, No. 8
A Bruttin, F Desiere, N d'Amico, JP Guerin, J Sidoti, B Huni, S Lucchini and H Brussow
A mozzarella cheese factory using an undefined, milk-derived Streptococcus
thermophilus starter system was monitored longitudinally for 2 years to
determine whether the diversity of the resident bacteriophage population
arose from environmental sources or from genetic changes in the resident
phage in the factory. The two hypotheses led to different predictions about
the genetic diversity of the phages. With respect to host range, 12
distinct phage types were observed. With two exceptions, phages belonging
to different lytic groups showed clearly distinct restriction patterns and
multiple isolates of phages showing the same host range exhibited identical
or highly related restriction patterns. Sequencing studies in a conserved
region of the phage genome revealed no point mutations in multiple isolates
of the same phage type, while up to 12% nucleotide sequence diversity was
observed between the different phage types. This diversity is as large as
that between the most different sequences from phages in our collection.
These observations make unlikely a model that postulates a single phage
invasion event and diversification of the phage during its residence in the
factory. In the second stage of our factory study, a defined starter system
was introduced that could not propagate the resident factory phage
population. Within a week, three new phage types were observed in the
factory while the resident phage population was decreased but not
eliminated. Raw milk was the most likely source of these new phages, as
phages with identical host ranges and restriction patterns were isolated
from raw milk delivered to the factory during the intervention trial.
Apparently, all of the genetic diversity observed in the S. thermophilus
phages isolated during our survey was already created in their natural
environment. A better understanding of the raw-milk ecology of S.
thermophilus phages is thus essential for successful practical phage
control.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Molecular ecology of Streptococcus thermophilus bacteriophage infections in a cheese factory
Nestle Research Center, Nestec Ltd., Lausanne, Switzerland.
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