Phage interactions may contribute to the population structure and dynamics of hydrothermal vent microbial symbionts
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Deep-sea hydrothermal vent ecosystems are sustained by chemoautotrophic bacteria that symbiotically provide organic matter to their animal hosts through the oxidation of chemical reductants in vent fluids. Hydrothermal vents also support unique viral communities that often exhibit high host-specificity and frequently integrate into host genomes as prophages; however, little is known about the role of viruses in influencing the chemosynthetic symbionts of vent foundation fauna. Here, we present a comprehensive examination of contemporary lysogenic and lytic bacteriophage infections, auxiliary metabolic genes, and CRISPR spacers associated with the intracellular bacterial endosymbionts of snails and mussels at hydrothermal vents in the Lau Basin (Tonga). Our investigation of contemporary phage infection among bacterial symbiont species and across distant vent locations indicated that each symbiont species interacts with different phage species across a large geographic range. However, our analysis of historical phage interactions via assessment of CRISPR spacer content suggested that phages may contribute to strain-level variation within a symbiont species. Surprisingly, prophages were absent from almost all symbiont genomes, suggesting that phage interactions with intracellular symbionts may differ from free-living microbes at vents. Altogether, these findings suggest that species-specific phages play a key role in regulating chemosynthetic symbionts via lytic infections, potentially shaping strain-level diversity and altering the composition and dynamics of symbiont populations.