“…To determine whether cryptic prophages affect persister cell formation, we converted the wild‐type, the Δ9 strain with all nine cryptic prophages deleted (Wang et al ., 2010), and each single cryptic prophage mutant (Wang et al ., 2010) to persister cells using a rifampicin pretreatment (Kwan et al ., 2013) and enumerated them. This method of generating persister cells has been validated eight ways (Kim et al ., 2018b) and utilized by at least 15 independent labs to date (Johnson and Levin, 2013; Kwan et al ., 2013; Grassi et al ., 2017; Cui et al ., 2018; Jin et al ., 2018; Narayanaswamy et al ., 2018; Sulaiman et al ., 2018; Tkhilaishvili et al ., 2018; Pu et al ., 2019; Martins et al ., 2020; Rowe et al ., 2020; Sun et al ., 2020; Yu et al ., 2020; Zhao et al ., 2020; Zheng et al ., 2020); the approach has the benefit of increasing the number of persister cells by 10 000‐fold (Kwan et al ., 2013) which enables single‐cell studies (Kim et al ., 2018a; Kim et al ., 2018b; Song and Wood, 2020a; Yamasaki et al ., 2020).…”