真核生物大核胞质DNA病毒的进化与病毒巨人症的趋同起源。

2区 医学 Q1 Medicine Advances in Virus Research Pub Date : 2019-01-01 Epub Date: 2018-11-10 DOI:10.1016/bs.aivir.2018.09.002
Eugene V Koonin, Natalya Yutin
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引用次数: 121

摘要

真核生物的核胞质大DNA病毒(NCLDV)(提议的“大病毒目”)包括一个庞大的真核病毒群,包括Poxviridae, Asfarviridae, Iridoviridae, Ascoviridae, Phycodnaviridae, marseililviridae, Pithoviridae和Mimiviridae,以及pandoravirus, mollivirus和faustovirus,这些病毒至今仍未被官方病毒分类。所有这些病毒都有双链DNA基因组,大小从大约100千碱基到超过2.5兆碱基不等。基因组大于500kb的病毒被非正式地认为是“巨型”病毒,最大的巨型病毒在颗粒和基因组大小上都超过了许多细菌和古细菌。巨型病毒的发现是非常出乎意料的,它改变了人们对病毒大小和复杂性的看法,甚至可以说,改变了病毒的整个概念。鉴于巨型病毒编码多种蛋白质,这些蛋白质在细胞生命形式中普遍存在,并且是翻译系统的组成部分,这是典型的细胞分子机制,人们试图将这些病毒纳入细胞生命的进化树中。此外,还提出了巨型病毒起源于第四种被认为已经灭绝的细胞生命领域的进化设想。然而,尽管基因组大小和基因库存在差异,但NCLDV可以自信地定义为单系群体,因为大约有40个基因可以追溯到他们最后的共同祖先。利用这一祖先集中的几个最保守的基因,构建了NCLDV的一个完整的系统发育树,并以此为框架重建了这组病毒在整个进化过程中的基因获得和丢失的历史。这种重建揭示了在许多病毒群中涉及广泛的基因获得和丢失的极其动态的进化,并表明在NCLDV的几个分支中独立出现了巨型病毒。因此,这些病毒世界的巨人从更小、更简单的病毒,而不是从细胞生命的第四个领域,反复进化,并从真核生物和一些细菌基因中捕获了许多基因,包括翻译系统成分的基因。甚至更深入的进化重建揭示了NCLDV和真核生物中更小的病毒(如腺病毒)之间的明显联系,最终,所有这些病毒都是从无尾噬菌体中衍生出来的。
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Evolution of the Large Nucleocytoplasmic DNA Viruses of Eukaryotes and Convergent Origins of Viral Gigantism.

The Nucleocytoplasmic Large DNA Viruses (NCLDV) of eukaryotes (proposed order "Megavirales") comprise an expansive group of eukaryotic viruses that consists of the families Poxviridae, Asfarviridae, Iridoviridae, Ascoviridae, Phycodnaviridae, Marseilleviridae, Pithoviridae, and Mimiviridae, as well as Pandoraviruses, Molliviruses, and Faustoviruses that so far remain unaccounted by the official virus taxonomy. All these viruses have double-stranded DNA genomes that range in size from about 100 kilobases (kb) to more than 2.5 megabases. The viruses with genomes larger than 500kb are informally considered "giant," and the largest giant viruses surpass numerous bacteria and archaea in both particle and genome size. The discovery of giant viruses has been highly unexpected and has changed the perception of viral size and complexity, and even, arguably, the entire concept of a virus. Given that giant viruses encode multiple proteins that are universal among cellular life forms and are components of the translation system, the quintessential cellular molecular machinery, attempts have been made to incorporate these viruses in the evolutionary tree of cellular life. Moreover, evolutionary scenarios of the origin of giant viruses from a fourth, supposedly extinct domain of cellular life have been proposed. However, despite all the differences in the genome size and gene repertoire, the NCLDV can be confidently defined as monophyletic group, on the strength of the presence of about 40 genes that can be traced back to their last common ancestor. Using several most strongly conserved genes from this ancestral set, a well-resolved phylogenetic tree of the NCLDV was built and employed as the scaffold to reconstruct the history of gene gain and loss throughout the course of the evolution of this group of viruses. This reconstruction reveals extremely dynamic evolution that involved extensive gene gain and loss in many groups of viruses and indicates that giant viruses emerged independently in several clades of the NCLDV. Thus, these giants of the virus world evolved repeatedly from smaller and simpler viruses, rather than from a fourth domain of cellular life, and captured numerous genes, including those for translation system components, from eukaryotes, along with some bacterial genes. Even deeper evolutionary reconstructions reveal apparent links between the NCLDV and smaller viruses of eukaryotes, such as adenoviruses, and ultimately, derive all these viruses from tailless bacteriophages.

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