4.8 Article

A major lineage of non-tailed dsDNA viruses as unrecognized killers of marine bacteria

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NATURE
卷 554, 期 7690, 页码 118-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nature25474

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资金

  1. National Science Foundation [OCE 1435993]
  2. NSF GRFP
  3. WHOI Ocean Ventures Fund
  4. Directorate For Geosciences [1435868] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [T32GM087237] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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The most abundant viruses on Earth are thought to be double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) viruses that infect bacteria(1). However, tailed bacterial dsDNA viruses (Caudovirales), which dominate sequence and culture collections, are not representative of the environmental diversity of viruses(2,3). In fact, non-tailed viruses often dominate ocean samples numerically4, raising the fundamental question of the nature of these viruses. Here we characterize a group of marine dsDNA non-tailed viruses with short 10-kb genomes isolated during a study that quantified the diversity of viruses infecting Vibrionaceae bacteria. These viruses, which we propose to name the Autolykiviridae, represent a novel family within the ancient lineage of double jelly roll (DJR) capsid viruses. Ecologically, members of the Autolykiviridae have a broad host range, killing on average 34 hosts in four Vibrio species, in contrast to tailed viruses which kill on average only two hosts in one species. Biochemical and physical characterization of autolykiviruses reveals multiple virion features that cause systematic loss of DJR viruses in sequencing and culture-based studies, and we describe simple procedural adjustments to recover them. We identify DJR viruses in the genomes of diverse major bacterial and archaeal phyla, and in marine water column and sediment metagenomes, and find that their diversity greatly exceeds the diversity that is currently captured by the three recognized families of such viruses. Overall, these data suggest that viruses of the non-tailed dsDNA DJR lineage are important but often overlooked predators of bacteria and archaea that impose fundamentally different predation and gene transfer regimes on microbial systems than on tailed viruses, which form the basis of all environmental models of bacteria-virus interactions.

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