Phage therapy of coral white plague disease: properties of phage BA3

Curr Microbiol. 2009 Feb;58(2):139-45. doi: 10.1007/s00284-008-9290-x. Epub 2008 Oct 16.

Abstract

The bacteriophage BA3 multiplies in and lyses the coral pathogen Thalassomonas loyana. The complete genome of phage BA3 was sequenced; it contains 47 open reading frames with a 40.9% G + C content. Phage BA3 adsorbed to its starved host in seawater with a k = 1.0 x 10(-6) phage ml(-1) min(-1). Phage therapy of coral disease in aquarium experiments was successful when the phage was added at the same time as the pathogen or 1 day later, but failed to protect the coral when added 2 days after bacterial infection. When the phages were added 1 day after coral infection, the phage titer increased about 100-fold and remained present in the aquarium water throughout the 37-day experiment. At the end of the experiment, the concentration of phages associated with the corals was 2.5 +/- 0.5 x 10(4) per cm(2) of coral surface. Corals that were infected with the pathogen and treated with phage did not transmit the disease to healthy corals.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Anthozoa / microbiology*
  • Anthozoa / virology*
  • Bacteriophages / genetics*
  • Gammaproteobacteria / virology*
  • Genome, Viral
  • Open Reading Frames
  • Seawater / microbiology
  • Seawater / virology