4.1 Article

Taxon Richness of Megaviridae Exceeds those of Bacteria and Archaea in the Ocean

Journal

MICROBES AND ENVIRONMENTS
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 162-171

Publisher

JAPANESE SOC MICROBIAL ECOLOGY, DEPT BIORESOURCE SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1264/jsme2.ME17203

Keywords

Mimiviridae; Megaviridae; species richness; RNA polymerase; ocean metagenome

Funding

  1. Canon Foundation [203143100025]
  2. JSPS/KAKENHI [16KT0020, 17H03850, 26430184]
  3. Scientific Research on Innovative Areas from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Science, Sports and Technology (MEXT) of Japan [16H06429, 16K21723, 16H06437]
  4. Collaborative Research Program of the Institute for Chemical Research, Kyoto University [2016-28, 2017-25]
  5. OCEANOMICS Investissements d'Avenir program of the French government [ANR-11-BTBR-0008]
  6. Tara Oceans consortium

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Since the discovery of the giant mimivirus, evolutionarily related viruses have been isolated or identified from various environments. Phylogenetic analyses of this group of viruses, tentatively referred to as the family Megaviridae, suggest that it has an ancient origin that may predate the emergence of major eukaryotic lineages. Environmental genomics has since revealed that Megaviridae represents one of the most abundant and diverse groups of viruses in the ocean. In the present study, we compared the taxon richness and phylogenetic diversity of Megaviridae, Bacteria, and Archaea using DNA-dependent RNA polymerase as a common marker gene. By leveraging existing microbial metagenomic data, we found higher richness and phylogenetic diversity in this single viral family than in the two prokaryotic domains. We also obtained results showing that the evolutionary rate alone cannot account for the observed high diversity of Megaviridae lineages. These results suggest that the Megaviridae family has a deep co-evolutionary history with diverse marine protists since the early Big-Bang radiation of the eukaryotic tree of life.

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