Vibrio Phage Artemius, a Novel Phage Infecting Vibrio alginolyticus

Vibrio alginolyticus is an important pathogen of marine animals and has been the target of phage therapy applications in marine aquaculture for many years. Here, we report the isolation and partial characterization of a novel species of the Siphoviridae family, the Vibrio phage Artemius. The novel phage was species-specific and could only infect strains of V. alginolyticus. It could efficiently reduce the growth of the host bacterium at various multiplicities of infection as assessed by an in vitro lysis assay. It had a genome length of 43,349 base pairs. The complete genome has double-stranded DNA with a G + C content of 43.61%. In total, 57 ORFs were identified, of which 19 were assigned a predicted function. A genomic analysis indicated that Vibrio phage Artemius is lytic and does not harbor genes encoding toxins and antibiotic resistance determinants.


Introduction
Vibrio alginolyticus is one of the most important pathogenic bacteria of marine organisms and has become a serious threat to the aquaculture industry [1]. It has been reported to be a causative agent of vibriosis in fish [2,3], crustaceans [4,5] and mollusks [6] all over the world. The pathogen is particularly relevant to the Chinese aquaculture industry where it has been associated with severe economic damage [7]. In European marine aquaculture, it is a common inhabitant of fish and bivalve hatcheries and it has been linked to larval mortality when poor water quality favors its growth, mostly in live feed departments [8]. The management of bacterial infections in aquaculture is mainly conducted with antibiotics, a practice that is currently under close scrutiny because of the risk of the development of antimicrobial resistance and its effect on the environment and consumers. In addition, there are cases where the use of antibiotics or disinfectants is not advisable or cannot be considered at all. An aquaculture hatchery, for example, is a delicate environment where bacterial communities are in a dynamic balance and play a crucial role in the survival, development and performance of the developing fish or bivalve larvae [9]. Therefore, the destruction of this microbial balance may lead to dysbiosis with detrimental consequences [10]. In this regard, phage therapy may offer a unique advantage in the modulation of the microbial population because phages are highly host-specific and can selectively target pathogenic bacteria without affecting the beneficial ones. Phage therapy has become very attractive in aquaculture; this is evident from the increasing research efforts observed in the past years [11][12][13].
Here, we describe the isolation and characterization of a novel phage infecting Vibrio alginolyticus isolated from the live feeds of a fish hatchery. This work is part of a broader effort Table 1. Bacterial strains used in the host range assay (T: strain type; h: host). "Environmental" refers to an environmental isolation source whereas "clinical" refers to bacteria that were isolated from disease cases in various fish.

Phage Isolation
The phage was isolated from the water of a live feed Artemia salina culture tank of IMBBC-HCMR following a standard enrichment procedure [20]. Briefly, 1 L of the sample water was enriched with 100 mL of 10 × LB medium, inoculated with 10 mL of an overnight culture of the host bacterium (Vibrio alginolyticus strain HCMR-2 Art1) and incubated at 25 • C for 24 h. Following filtration through 0.22 µm filters, 10 µL aliquots were plated by a standard double-layer agar method and incubated overnight at 25 • C to detect and enumerate the plaque forming units (PFU). The clearest plaque formed was picked and further purified by re-plating five times to ensure clonal phage stocks. The purified phage was named Vibrio phage Artemius and propagated to reach a titer of 10 10 PFU mL −1 and stored at 4 • C.

Phage Morphology
The phage morphology was observed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). An aliquot of the phage suspension with a titer of~10 10 PFU mL −1 was negatively stained with 4% w/v uranyl acetate. Vibrio phage Artemius was observed using a JOEL transmission electron microscope operated at 60 kV at the Electron Microscopy Lab of the University of Crete.

Host Range
The host range of Vibrio phage Artemius was evaluated by a spot test using the bacterial stains shown in Table 1. A total of 1 mL of fresh culture of each bacterial strain (10 7 CFU mL −1 ) was mixed with 3 mL of warm top agar (culture medium with 0.6% agar) and poured onto bottom LB 1/2 agar plates. When the top agar hardened, spots of 10 µL phage were made and examined after 24 h incubation for lysis.

In Vitro Efficacy
The efficacy of Vibrio phage Artemius on the host strain was assessed by an in vitro lysis assay. Sterile 96-well plates were used and loaded with 180 µL of a freshly prepared culture of the host bacterium. The plate was placed in a TECAN microplate reader (Infinite PRO 200) equipped with a temperature control and incubated at 25 • C with orbital shaking. When the bacterial culture was at the exponential phase (~10 7 CFU mL −1 ), it was infected with 20 µL of the phage preparation at 4 different MOIs (0.1, 1, 10 and 100 in triplicate). Three wells were not infected and were used as the control. The growth curve of the cultures was monitored in real-time over a minimum of 18 h and OD600 measurements were recorded every 10 min.

Phage Stability at Different Temperatures and pH
The thermal stability of the novel phage was examined by exposing 500 µL aliquots of the phage (titer: 10 7 PFU mL −1 ) to different temperatures (4,25,35,45,65,70 and 80 • C). The aliquots were incubated at each temperature for 1 h and then rested at room temperature (RT) for 10 min. Each aliquot was then serially diluted and spotted (10 µL/spot) on a host bacterial lawn (HCMR-2 Art1). After a 24 h incubation of the agar plates, the phage titer was determined for each temperature and 4 • C was used as the control.
The sensitivity of the phage in acidic and alkaline environments was determined by exposing the phage to different pH values according to Pan et al. [21]. A scale of pH ranging from 1 to 10 was made by adding NaOH or HCl to the LB broth agar. The phage was suspended at each different pH value with a final titer of 10 7 PFU mL −1 and stored at 4 • C. After 2 h, and then 10 min of rest at RT, the aliquots were serially diluted and spotted onto the host bacterial lawn. After a 24 h incubation of the agar plates, the phage titer was determined for each pH value and pH = 7 was used as the control. Both the thermal and pH stability was tested in triplicate.

Adsorption Time and One-Step Growth
For the adsorption time and one-step growth, we followed the protocol described in Misol et al. [16] according to Clokie et al. [22] with a few modifications in triplicate. For the adsorption time, a fresh host culture at the exponential phase (~10 7 CFU mL −1 ) was infected with the phage at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.01. The same amount of phage was added to a tube containing only LB and served as the control. Immediately after the infection, 500 µL of the infected culture was placed in tubes containing chloroform and stored in ice (4 • C). The same procedure was repeated for 20 min with a 2 min interval. When all time points were collected, the aliquots were centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 3 min. They were then serially diluted and spotted onto the host bacterial lawn on LB 1 2 agar plates. The phage titer was determined after 24 h of incubation of the agar plates at 25 • C.
For the one-step growth, 1 mL of freshly grown culture at the exponential phase (~10 7 CFU mL −1 ) was centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 3 min. The supernatant was discarded Pathogens 2022, 11, 848 4 of 15 and the pellet was washed with saline. After two repetitions of this step, the culture was finally resuspended in LB, infected with the phage at a MOI of 0.01 and rested for 15 min at RT. Following centrifugation at 13,000 rpm for 3 min, the supernatant was discarded and the pellet was dissolved in 1 mL saline. The infected culture was then transferred to a new tube containing 25 mL LB and the aliquots were immediately removed and placed in empty Eppendorf vials. The aliquots were then centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 3 min and the supernatant was transferred to a new 2 mL Eppendorf vial, serially diluted and spotted onto the host bacterial lawn on LB 1 2 agar plates. This procedure was repeated every 10 min for 120 min. The phage titer was determined after 24 h of incubation of the agar plates at 25 • C.

Genomic Analysis
The DNA extraction of Vibrio phage Artemius was performed using the phenolchloroform method according to Higuera et al. [20]. The extracted DNA was visualized for quality via 1% agarose gel electrophoresis at 80 kV for 1 h with a 50 kbp ladder. Milli-Q ® Reference Water (Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) was used as a negative control. At least 5 µg of high-purity bacterial DNA, the quality of which was tested using a BioAnalyzer (Bio-Rad, Chicago, CA, USA), was used to generate a paired-end 300 PE genomic library with an optimized size selection using magnetic bead purifications based on the standard Illumina protocol and by using a Nextera XT Library Construction Kit (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA). To calculate the average size of the library, we used a Tapestastion 4200 system (Agilent, New York, CA, USA). The insert size was estimated as the average size of the library minus the Illumina adapter size and was found to be 834 bp. The sequencing was performed using an Illumina NovaSeq 6000 sequencing platform (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's protocol at Life Sequencing (Valencia, Spain), which allowed us to obtain at least 1 million paired reads sequences. Possibly contaminated, primer, N-terminus and 3 -, 5 -low quality reads were trimmed off (threshold: 0.05). The raw reads were quality inspected and were assembled in Geneious Prime using the Geneious assembler. RASTk and Glimmer were used as the gene predictors for the structural annotation through the PATRIC webserver [23] and Galaxy webserver [24]. The presence of a phage start codon (ATG/GTG or TTG) was manually validated and a Shine-Dalgarno feature was added to all features that had a detectable match. The functional annotation of the predicted proteins was conducted manually using the NCBI Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST) [25] adjusted at a non-redundant (nr) protein database as well as the Gene Ontology [26], InterPro [27] and TMHMM 2.0 [28,29] databases. The NCBI Conserved Domain Database (NCBI CDD) [30] was used to detect the conserved regions within the predicted proteins. Genes associated with integration, virulence and antibiotic resistance in the phage genome were searched for using the INTEGRALL Database webserver [31] and Virulence Factor Database (VFDB) [32] as well as the VirulenceFinder and ResFinder webservers [33]. The phage genome was scanned for the presence of tRNAs using the ARAGORN tool [34] through the Galaxy server [24]. The phage lifestyle was also assessed using the Phage AI platform (PhageAI S.A. Artificial Intelligence & Bioinformatics for Phage Research, https://phage.ai/, accessed on 1 May 2022). The genome of Vibrio phage Artemius with annotated predicted ORFs was then visualized in a circular representation with Geneious software (Geneious v9.1, Biomatters, Auckland, New Zealand, http://www.geneious.com, accessed on 1 May 2022) and CGview.

Phylogeny
A ViPTree was used to build a viral proteomic tree by comparing the proteome of Vibrio phage Artemius with 4982 dsDNA phage proteomes [35]. The phylogenetic relationship between Artemius and other similar Vibrio phages was determined using Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis (MEGA X) software ( Table 2) [36]. A total of 14 large terminase subunits of the described Vibrio phages were downloaded from the NCBI VIRUS database and were aligned with the large terminase subunit of Vibrio phage Artemius using the MUSCLE algorithm [37]. The gaps in the amino acid sequence alignments were trimmed. A maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree was constructed using the TN93 model [38] with a bootstrap test = 1000. The Interactive Tree of Life webserver [39] was used to visualize the constructed tree.

Results
The phage morphology of the virions as observed with TEM classified the novel phage to the Siphoviridae family. The head was 48.7 ± 0.9 nm wide and the tail was 107.0 ± 2.9 nm long (average ± S.E, n = 15) (

In Vitro Efficacy
Vibrio phage Artemius was able to lyse the host bacterial population in vitro using approximate MOIs ranging between 0.1 and 100 (Figure 2), with the highest MOI yielding a more rapid decrease in the bacterial titer. The bacterial titer remained low (close to the detection limit) over a period of approximately 10 h.

In Vitro Efficacy
Vibrio phage Artemius was able to lyse the host bacterial population in vitro using approximate MOIs ranging between 0.1 and 100 (Figure 2), with the highest MOI yielding a more rapid decrease in the bacterial titer. The bacterial titer remained low (close to the detection limit) over a period of approximately 10 h.

In Vitro Efficacy
Vibrio phage Artemius was able to lyse the host bacterial population in vitro using approximate MOIs ranging between 0.1 and 100 (Figure 2), with the highest MOI yielding a more rapid decrease in the bacterial titer. The bacterial titer remained low (close to the detection limit) over a period of approximately 10 h.

Host Range
According to the host range assay, Vibrio phage Artemius was able to only lyse strains that belonged to V. alginolyticus and none of the other bacteria that were tested in the study ( Table 3).

Host Range
According to the host range assay, Vibrio phage Artemius was able to only lyse strains that belonged to V. alginolyticus and none of the other bacteria that were tested in the study ( Table 3). Table 3. Host range of the Artemius phage (h: host strain; +++: complete clearing; +: substantial turbidity throughout the cleared zone; −: no lysis).

Strain
Species Lysis

Thermal and pH Stability
We exposed Artemius to different temperatures ranging from 25 • C to 80 • C, with T = 4 • C serving as the control (Figure 3a), to investigate its thermal stability. We found that Artemius was stable up to 65 • C with no significant difference in the titer compared with the control. A reduction of the titer (one-way ANOVA, p < 0.05) was observed when the phage was exposed to 70 • C and 80 • C. The phage was not inactivated at high temperatures. We then exposed the phage to acidic and alkaline pH values ranging from pH = 1 to pH = 10 and compared the titer of the phage with the titer at pH = 7, which served as the control (Figure 3b). The phage was inactivated when exposed to pH = 1 and pH = 2 (one-way ANOVA, p < 0.001), but remained stable from pH = 3 to pH = 10 with no statistically significant difference compared with the control.

Adsorption Time and One-Step Growth
The adsorption time assay showed that 90% of the Vibrio phage Artemius virions required 10 min to bind to the bacterial host ( Figure 4a). Artemius had a latent period of 20 min and a rise period between 20 and 60 min. The plateau phase, when no more phages were released from the host cell, was reached at 60 min. The burst size was calculated to be 779 PFU cell −1 .

Genomic Analysis
The genome size of Vibrio phage Artemius was 43,349 bp with a GC content of 43.61%. The genome arrangement was dense, as suggested by the 1.31 genes per kbp. The

Adsorption Time and One-Step Growth
The adsorption time assay showed that 90% of the Vibrio phage Artemius virions required 10 min to bind to the bacterial host ( Figure 4a). Artemius had a latent period of 20 min and a rise period between 20 and 60 min. The plateau phase, when no more phages were released from the host cell, was reached at 60 min. The burst size was calculated to be 779 PFU cell −1 .

Adsorption Time and One-Step Growth
The adsorption time assay showed that 90% of the Vibrio phage Artemius virions required 10 min to bind to the bacterial host ( Figure 4a). Artemius had a latent period of 20 min and a rise period between 20 and 60 min. The plateau phase, when no more phages were released from the host cell, was reached at 60 min. The burst size was calculated to be 779 PFU cell −1 .

Genomic Analysis
The genome size of Vibrio phage Artemius was 43,349 bp with a GC content of 43.61%. The genome arrangement was dense, as suggested by the 1.31 genes per kbp. The Rapid Annotation using Subsystem Technology (RASTk) server and Glimmer.hmm 3.0

Genomic Analysis
The genome size of Vibrio phage Artemius was 43,349 bp with a GC content of 43.61%. The genome arrangement was dense, as suggested by the 1.31 genes per kbp. The Rapid Annotation using Subsystem Technology (RASTk) server and Glimmer.hmm 3.0 revealed that 57 ORFs were present in the genome. Each individual ORF was manually inspected in order to validate the presence of start codons (ATG/GTG or TTG). There was no presence of tRNA in the genome, as shown by ARAGORN. A total of 50 ORFs used a start codon of ATG, 6 ORFs used GTG and 1 used TTG. A search of the NCBI nr database showed that 45 ORFs (78.95%) had significant hits (expected value ≤ 10 −3 ) with an average similarity of 52.67%. Overall, 19 ORFs (10.83%) were assigned a function based on the protein homology. No genes associated with integration, virulence or antibiotic resistance were detected. The genome of Vibrio phage Artemius was not modularly organized ( Figure 5). However, several gene encoding proteins required for phage assembly (ORF 2, ORF 5, ORF 6, ORF 8, ORF 10, ORF 13, ORF 16, ORF 17 and ORF 22) were arranged in subclusters as well as a few genes encoding for DNA replication and nucleotide metabolism proteins (ORF 25, ORF 33, ORF 51 and ORF 54). The genes that were functionally annotated are shown in Table 4.   The proteins required for phage morphogenesis included major capsid protein (ORF 8), tail-length tape measure protein (ORF 17), tail tube protein (ORF 13), tail tubular protein (ORF 22) and neck protein (ORF 16). In addition, the small terminase subunit (ORF 2), large terminase subunit (ORF 5), stopper protein (ORF 10) and phage portal protein The proteins required for phage morphogenesis included major capsid protein (ORF 8), tail-length tape measure protein (ORF 17), tail tube protein (ORF 13), tail tubular protein (ORF 22) and neck protein (ORF 16). In addition, the small terminase subunit (ORF 2), large terminase subunit (ORF 5), stopper protein (ORF 10) and phage portal protein (ORF 6), which are involved in DNA packaging for tailed phages, were identified. Proteins for DNA replication, recombination and repair were also detected: these were DNA polymerase (ORF 23), HNH endonuclease (ORF 51), DNA polymerases, DNA helicase (ORF 33, DNA primase (ORF 25) and other regulatory elements (ORF 54). Finally, several transmembrane proteins were detected (ORF 21, 35, 37 and 39) (Figure 6).

Phylogenetic Analysis
A wide genome proteomic tree analysis validated that Vibrio phage Artemius belonged to the Siphoviridae taxonomic family (Figure 7). In addition, it was predicted to infect hosts from the Gammaproteobacteria class, which includes the Vibrionaceae family. A closer view of the tree focusing on the nearest relatives (Figure 8) showed that Vibrio phage Artemius clustered together with Shewanella phage 1/44 (Siphoviridae) and Escherichia phage PTXU04 (Podoviridae).
Phylogeny using the large terminase subunits of the Vibrio alginolyticus phages (Figure 9) showed that Vibrio phage Artemius shared a common ancestor with Vibrio phage phi-St2 and Vibrio phage phi-Grn1. However, the phages were rather distant, resulting in low bootstrap values (<75%); thus, the node was not well-supported. A large terminase subunit gene was used for the phylogeny because it is considered to be a signature, well-conserved gene among the phages and is a strong molecular motor associated with phage packaging [40]. Pathogens 2022, 11, x FOR PEER REVIEW 12 of 16  Phylogeny using the large terminase subunits of the Vibrio alginolyticus phages (Figure 9) showed that Vibrio phage Artemius shared a common ancestor with Vibrio phage phi-St2 and Vibrio phage phi-Grn1. However, the phages were rather distant, resulting in  Phylogeny using the large terminase subunits of the Vibrio alginolyticus phages (Figure 9) showed that Vibrio phage Artemius shared a common ancestor with Vibrio phage phi-St2 and Vibrio phage phi-Grn1. However, the phages were rather distant, resulting in low bootstrap values (<75%); thus, the node was not well-supported. A large terminase subunit gene was used for the phylogeny because it is considered to be a signature, wellconserved gene among the phages and is a strong molecular motor associated with phage packaging [40]. Figure 9. Phylogenetic tree of Vibrio phage Artemius with other Vibrio alginolyticus phages. The nucleotide sequences of large terminase subunits of phages were downloaded from the NCBI database and aligned using MUSCLE and a maximum likelihood (bootstrap = 1000). A rooted phylogenetic tree was constructed using MEGA X. Gene sequences with less than 20% similarity with the obtained sequence were arbitrarily set as an outgroup. The bootstrap support value is denoted in each branch as a percentage.

Discussion
Vibrio alginolyticus has been used frequently as a target for novel phage isolation. Until today, more than 40 different phages have been isolated against V. alginolyticus, which is suggestive of the importance of this opportunistic pathogen for the aquaculture industry [41]. Several reviews have been published on the topic of phage therapy in aquaculture and the existing challenges [11,42], but also specifically on the interaction of phages with vibrios [13].
Vibrio phage Artemius is a novel phage, as indicated by the BLAST search in the NCBI nr database where the closest phage at the nucleotide level was Vibrio phage 2.044.O._10N.261.51.B8 (MG592661.1) with a 79.6% similarity over a 2% query cover. A phylogenetic analysis of Artemius verified the novelty of this phage. According to the phylogeny obtained with the terminase large subunit using phages infecting the same host (V. alginolyticus), Vibrio phage Artemius was closer to Vibrio phage phi-St2 and Vibrio phage phi-Grn1, which belong to the genus of Schizotequatrovirus [43]. According to the ViPTree analysis, which uses the whole proteome of all described phages, Vibrio phage Artemius was closer to siphovirus 1/44 infecting Shewanella sp. Interestingly, this phage was isolated from iced water in the Baltic Sea [44]. The diversity of the phages and the mosaicism of their genomic arrangement make a phylogenetic analysis using traditional phylogenetic trees difficult and occasionally vague, especially when phage species are under-represented [45,46].
Two of the most crucial characteristics of a phage to be considered for therapeutic purposes are the inability to integrate in the host genome and the lack of unwanted genes such as toxins and antibiotic resistance determinants that could be transferred to its host through lysogenic conversion or recombination [47]. A genomic analysis of Vibrio phage Artemius showed that it was a lytic phage because no integrase or temperateness-related genes were identified. This was further corroborated by all the bioinformatic tools used such as INTEGRALL and Phage AI, which also indicated a lytic life cycle. Furthermore, no toxins or AMR-related genes were found, indicating that Vibrio phage Artemius could be considered to be safe for use in phage therapy applications. Gene-encoding predicted structural proteins were identified in the genome of the novel phage, including capsid Figure 9. Phylogenetic tree of Vibrio phage Artemius with other Vibrio alginolyticus phages. The nucleotide sequences of large terminase subunits of phages were downloaded from the NCBI database and aligned using MUSCLE and a maximum likelihood (bootstrap = 1000). A rooted phylogenetic tree was constructed using MEGA X. Gene sequences with less than 20% similarity with the obtained sequence were arbitrarily set as an outgroup. The bootstrap support value is denoted in each branch as a percentage.

Discussion
Vibrio alginolyticus has been used frequently as a target for novel phage isolation. Until today, more than 40 different phages have been isolated against V. alginolyticus, which is suggestive of the importance of this opportunistic pathogen for the aquaculture industry [41]. Several reviews have been published on the topic of phage therapy in aquaculture and the existing challenges [11,42], but also specifically on the interaction of phages with vibrios [13].
Vibrio phage Artemius is a novel phage, as indicated by the BLAST search in the NCBI nr database where the closest phage at the nucleotide level was Vibrio phage 2.044.O._10N.261.51.B8 (MG592661.1) with a 79.6% similarity over a 2% query cover. A phylogenetic analysis of Artemius verified the novelty of this phage. According to the phylogeny obtained with the terminase large subunit using phages infecting the same host (V. alginolyticus), Vibrio phage Artemius was closer to Vibrio phage phi-St2 and Vibrio phage phi-Grn1, which belong to the genus of Schizotequatrovirus [43]. According to the ViPTree analysis, which uses the whole proteome of all described phages, Vibrio phage Artemius was closer to siphovirus 1/44 infecting Shewanella sp. Interestingly, this phage was isolated from iced water in the Baltic Sea [44]. The diversity of the phages and the mosaicism of their genomic arrangement make a phylogenetic analysis using traditional phylogenetic trees difficult and occasionally vague, especially when phage species are under-represented [45,46].
Two of the most crucial characteristics of a phage to be considered for therapeutic purposes are the inability to integrate in the host genome and the lack of unwanted genes such as toxins and antibiotic resistance determinants that could be transferred to its host through lysogenic conversion or recombination [47]. A genomic analysis of Vibrio phage Artemius showed that it was a lytic phage because no integrase or temperateness-related genes were identified. This was further corroborated by all the bioinformatic tools used such as INTEGRALL and Phage AI, which also indicated a lytic life cycle. Furthermore, no toxins or AMR-related genes were found, indicating that Vibrio phage Artemius could be considered to be safe for use in phage therapy applications. Gene-encoding predicted structural proteins were identified in the genome of the novel phage, including capsid protein, tail-length tape measure protein, tail tube protein, tail tubular protein and neck protein. An interesting gene found in the Vibrio phage Artemius genome was ORF29 encoding a PD-(D/E) XS nuclease. A search in the Conserved Domain Database (CDD) of NCBI revealed that this particular protein belongs to the superfamily of Cas4 nucleases. It has been suggested that phage-derived Cas4 leads to the acquisition of more host-derived spacers in type II-C CRISPR-Cas systems, enhancing the survival of the host and ultimately the bacteriophage whilst in a carrier state [48]. If this is the case, a further investigation is required in order to better understand the role of this particular gene, which will improve our knowledge of the dynamics of phage/host interactions.
High temperatures usually have a devastating effect on phage integrity, causing tail aggregation, detachment of the phage head and denaturation of the nucleic acid [49]. Interestingly, Vibrio phage Artemius withstood temperatures as high as 80 • C. It has been suggested that heat resistance may be the result of mutations or strong protein interactions [50] and it is usually a unique characteristic of the phage particle [51]. Although it is not common, phages that are resistant to high temperatures have been reported before [52], many of which were members of the of Siphoviridae family [53].
The host range of Vibrio phage Artemius was limited to strains of Vibrio alginolyticus as it was not able to infect the other congeneric species; thus, it was a species-specific phage. Broad host-range phages are considered to be ideal for phage therapy, especially in aquaculture where the diversity of the pathogenic strains and species is wide. Phages with a broad host range have been reported against Vibrio alginolyticus [14,41]. In terms of efficacy, Vibrio phage Artemius could efficiently prevent the growth of its host even at low MOIs, suggesting that it could be practically used in aquaculture where considerable quantities are required to treat large volumes of water. This was further corroborated by the large burst size of the novel phage.
In conclusion, Vibrio phage Artemius is a potential new species of the Siphoviridae family that infects V. alginolyticus and, based on its biological and genomic characteristics, could be considered for efficient and safe phage therapy applications.