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Prophages in the infant gut are pervasively induced and may modulate the functionality of their hosts

Tamsin A. Redgwell, Jonathan Thorsen, Marie Agnès Petit, Ling Deng, Gisle Vestergaard, Jakob Russel, Bo Chawes, Klaus Bønnelykke, Hans Bisgaard, Dennis S. Nielsen, Søren Sørensen, Jakob Stokholm, Shiraz A. Shah*

*Corresponding author for this work
2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Gut microbiome (GM) composition and function is pivotal for human health and disease, of which the virome’s importance is increasingly recognised. However, prophages and their induction patterns in the infant gut remain understudied. Here, we identified 10645 putative prophages in 662 metagenomes from 1-year-old children in the COPSAC2010 mother-child cohort and investigated their potential functions. No core provirome was found as the most prevalent vOTU was identified in only ~70% of the samples. The most dominant cluster of vOTUs in the cohort was related to Bacteroides phage Hanky p00’, and it carried both diversity generating retroelements and genes involved in capsular polysaccharide synthesis. Paired analysis of viromes and metagenomes from the same samples revealed that most prophages within the infant gut were induced and that induction was unaffected by a range of environmental perturbers. In summary, prophages are major components of the infant gut that may have far reaching influences on the microbiome and its host.

Original languageEnglish
Article number46
JournalNPJ biofilms and microbiomes
Volume11
Issue number1
ISSN2055-5008
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2025

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