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Giant Marseillevirus highlights the role of amoebae as a melting pot in emergence of chimeric microorganisms
Authors:Micka?l Boyer  Natalya Yutin  Isabelle Pagnier  Lina Barrassi  Ghislain Fournous  Leon Espinosa  Catherine Robert  Sa?d Azza  Siyang Sun  Michael G. Rossmann  Marie Suzan-Monti  Bernard La Scola  Eugene V. Koonin  Didier Raoult
Abstract:Giant viruses such as Mimivirus isolated from amoeba found in aquatic habitats show biological sophistication comparable to that of simple cellular life forms and seem to evolve by similar mechanisms, including extensive gene duplication and horizontal gene transfer (HGT), possibly in part through a viral parasite, the virophage. We report here the isolation of “Marseille” virus, a previously uncharacterized giant virus of amoeba. The virions of Marseillevirus encompass a 368-kb genome, a minimum of 49 proteins, and some messenger RNAs. Phylogenetic analysis of core genes indicates that Marseillevirus is the prototype of a family of nucleocytoplasmic large DNA viruses (NCLDV) of eukaryotes. The genome repertoire of the virus is composed of typical NCLDV core genes and genes apparently obtained from eukaryotic hosts and their parasites or symbionts, both bacterial and viral. We propose that amoebae are “melting pots” of microbial evolution where diverse forms emerge, including giant viruses with complex gene repertoires of various origins.
Keywords:giant virus   horizontal gene transfer   nucleocytoplasmic large DNA virus   viral evolution
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