Publication | Open Access
The Closest Relatives of Icosahedral Viruses of Thermophilic Bacteria Are among Viruses and Plasmids of the Halophilic Archaea
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Citations
72
References
2009
Year
Bacteriophage GenomeViral Polymerase MechanismHalophilic ArchaeaMolecular BiologyArchaeaMicrobial VirusVirus StructureBacterial PathogensPhylogenetic AnalysisVirus PhylogenyVirus GeneClosest RelativesIcosahedral Virus P23-77VirologyVirus ClassificationIcosahedral VirusesStructural BiologyMicrobial SystematicsNatural SciencesPutative Packaging AtpaseMicrobiologyMedicine
ABSTRACT We have sequenced the genome and identified the structural proteins and lipids of the novel membrane-containing, icosahedral virus P23-77 of Thermus thermophilus . P23-77 has an ∼17-kb circular double-stranded DNA genome, which was annotated to contain 37 putative genes. Virions were subjected to dissociation analysis, and five protein species were shown to associate with the internal viral membrane, while three were constituents of the protein capsid. Analysis of the bacteriophage genome revealed it to be evolutionarily related to another Thermus phage (IN93), archaeal Halobacterium plasmid (pHH205), a genetic element integrated into Haloarcula genome (designated here as IHP for integrated Haloarcula provirus), and the Haloarcula virus SH1. These genetic elements share two major capsid proteins and a putative packaging ATPase. The ATPase is similar with the ATPases found in the PRD1-type viruses, thus providing an evolutionary link to these viruses and furthering our knowledge on the origin of viruses.
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