Activation of bacterial programmed cell death by phage inhibitors of host immunity
- PMID: 40315827
- PMCID: PMC12088041
- DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2025.04.010
Activation of bacterial programmed cell death by phage inhibitors of host immunity
Abstract
Bacterial and archaeal viruses are replete with diverse uncharacterized accessory genes (AGs), which likely interface with host processes. However, large-scale discovery of virus AG functions remains challenging. Here, we developed an integrated computational and experimental discovery platform to identify viral AGs and assign functions. We show that multiple AGs activate unexpected programmed cell death (PCD) activity of distinct restriction-modification (R-M) systems. We describe an exapted type I R-M decoy that kills the host upon sensing several different anti-defense AGs and a self-guarded type III R-M system that restricts phages but also induces PCD when bound by anti-R-M proteins. Other phage counter-defense genes additionally activate non-R-M-based abortive infection systems encoded by prophages. This defense strategy creates a conundrum: lose AGs and be exposed to immunity or keep AGs and trigger PCD. Strategies employed by viruses to avoid this double bind could be an important factor in virus evolution that remains to be explored.
Keywords: abortive immunity; accessory genes; bacteria; comparative genomics; immune inhibitors; phage; phage defense; restriction-modification.
Copyright © 2025 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of interests S.S. is a co-founder and equity holder in BillionToOne, Inc. and a scientific advisory board member for Junevity, Inc. P.K. is a full-time employee of ONI. M.B. is a full-time employee of Twist. J.B.-D. is a scientific advisory board member of SNIPR Biome, Excision Biotherapeutics, and LeapFrog Bio; consults for BiomX; and is a scientific advisory board member and co-founder of Acrigen Biosciences. The Bondy-Denomy lab received research support from Felix Biotechnology.
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