4.6 Article

An in silico analysis revealed a novel evolutionary lineage of putative mitoviruses

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 12, Pages 6463-6475

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.16202

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Funding

  1. Secretary of Science and Technique [34020190100081CB, 33620180100149CB]
  2. National Scientific and Technical Research Council [PIP 11220200102478CO]
  3. National Agency for Scientific and Technological [PICT-2021-CATI00192, PICT 2019-03300]

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This study identified new putative mitovirus sequences associated with animals, providing strong evidence for the existence of a clade of putative mitoviruses associated with animals.
Mitoviruses (family Mitoviridae) are small capsid-less RNA viruses that replicate in the mitochondria of fungi and plants. However, to date, the only authentic animal mitovirus infecting an insect was identified as Lutzomyia longipalpis mitovirus 1 (LulMV1). Public databases of transcriptomic studies from several animals may be a good source for identifying the often missed mitoviruses. Consequently, a search of mitovirus-like transcripts at the NCBI transcriptome shotgun assembly (TSA) library, and a search for the mitoviruses previously recorded at the NCBI non-redundant (nr) protein sequences library, were performed in order to identify new mitovirus-like sequences associated with animals. In total, 10 new putative mitoviruses were identified in the TSA database and 8 putative mitoviruses in the nr protein database. To our knowledge, these results represent the first evidence of putative mitoviruses associated with poriferan, cnidarians, echinoderms, crustaceans, myriapods and arachnids. According to different phylogenetic inferences using the maximum likelihood method, these 18 putative mitoviruses form a robust monophyletic lineage with LulMV1, the only known animal-infecting mitovirus. These findings based on in silico procedures provide strong evidence for the existence of a clade of putative mitoviruses associated with animals, which has been provisionally named 'kvinmitovirus'.

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