The virophage family lavidaviridae

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Abstract

Double-stranded (ds) DNA viruses of the family Lavidaviridae, commonly known as virophages, are a fascinating group of eukaryotic viruses that depend on a coinfecting giant dsDNA virus of the Mimiviridae for their propagation. Instead of replicating in the nucleus, virophages multiply in the cytoplasmic virion factory of a coinfecting giant virus inside a phototrophic or heterotrophic protistal host cell. Virophages are parasites of giant viruses and can inhibit their replication, which may lead to increased survival rates of the infected host cell population. The genomes of virophages are 17–33 kilobase pairs (kbp) long and encode 16–34 proteins. Genetic signatures of virophages can be found in metagenomic datasets from various saltwater and freshwater environments around the planet. Most virophages share a set of conserved genes that code for a major and a minor capsid protein, a cysteine protease, a genome-packaging ATPase, and a superfamily 3 helicase, although the genomes are otherwise diverse and variable. Lavi-daviruses share genes with other mobile genetic elements, suggesting that horizontal gene transfer and recombination have been major forces in shap-ing these viral genomes. Integrases are occasionally found in virophage genomes and enable these DNA viruses to persist as provirophages in the chromo-somes of their viral and cellular hosts. As we watch the genetic diversity of this new viral family unfold through metagenomics, additional isolates are still lacking and critical questions regarding their infection cycle, host range, and ecology remain to be answered.

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APA

Fischer, M. G. (2020). The virophage family lavidaviridae. Current Issues in Molecular Biology, 40, 1–24. https://doi.org/10.21775/cimb.040.001

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