4.6 Article

The Novel Halovirus Hardycor1, and the Presence of Active (Induced) Proviruses in Four Haloarchaea

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12020149

Keywords

archaea; haloarchaea; temperate virus; Haloferax; Haloarcula; Halorubrum; halobacteria; pleolipovirus; caudovirus; siphovirus

Funding

  1. Academia Sinica

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Hardycor1 virus, isolated in 1998 infecting Halorubrum coriense, has a large genome with low similarity to known viruses. The virus stock also contains two induced proviruses of the host.
The virus Hardycor1 was isolated in 1998 and infects the haloarchaeon Halorubrum coriense. DNA from a frozen stock (HC1) was sequenced and the viral genome found to be 45,142 bp of dsDNA, probably having redundant, circularly permuted termini. The genome showed little similarity (BLASTn) to known viruses. Only twenty-two of the 53 (41%) predicted proteins were significantly similar to sequences in the NCBI nr protein database (E-value <= 10(-15)). Six caudovirus-like proteins were encoded, including large subunit terminase (TerL), major capsid protein (Mcp) and tape measure protein (Tmp). Hardycor1 was predicted to be a siphovirus (VIRFAM). No close relationship to other viruses was found using phylogenetic tree reconstructions based on TerL and Mcp. Unexpectedly, the sequenced virus stock HC1 also revealed two induced proviruses of the host: a siphovirus (Humcor1) and a pleolipovirus (Humcor2). A re-examination of other similarly sequenced, archival virus stocks revealed induced proviruses of Haloferax volcanii, Haloferax gibbonsii and Haloarcula hispanica, three of which were pleolipoviruses. One provirus (Halfvol2) of Hfx. volcanii showed little similarity (BLASTn) to known viruses and probably represents a novel virus group. The attP sequences of many pleolipoproviruses were found to be embedded in a newly detected coding sequence, split in the provirus state, that spans between genes for integrase and a downstream CxxC-motif protein. This gene might play an important role in regulation of the temperate state.

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