Abstract
ABSTRACTDespite their high genomic diversity, all known viruses are structurally constrained to a limited number of virion morphotypes. One morphotype of viruses infecting bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes is the tailless icosahedral morphotype with an internal membrane. Although it is considered an abundant morphotype in extreme environments, only seven such archaeal viruses are known. Here, we introduce Haloarcula californiae icosahedral virus 1 (HCIV-1), a halophilic euryarchaeal virus originating from salt crystals. HCIV-1 also retains its infectivity under low-salinity conditions, showing that it is able to adapt to environmental changes. The release of progeny virions resulting from cell lysis was evidenced by reduced cellular oxygen consumption, leakage of intracellular ATP, and binding of an indicator ion to ruptured cell membranes. The virion contains at least 12 different protein species, lipids selectively acquired from the host cell membrane, and a 31,314-bp-long linear double-stranded DNA (dsDNA). The overall genome organization and sequence show high similarity to the genomes of archaeal viruses in the Sphaerolipoviridae family. Phylogenetic analysis based on the major conserved components needed for virion assembly—the major capsid proteins and the packaging ATPase—placed HCIV-1 along with the alphasphaerolipoviruses in a distinct, well-supported clade. On the basis of its virion morphology and sequence similarities, most notably, those of its core virion components, we propose that HCIV-1 is a member of the PRD1-adenovirus structure-based lineage together with other sphaerolipoviruses. This addition to the lineage reinforces the notion of the ancient evolutionary links observed between the viruses and further highlights the limits of the choices found in nature for formation of a virion.
Highlights
Archaea dominate in extreme environments; ~140 known archaeal viruses have been isolated, mainly from geothermal springs and high-salinity environments (1)
Haloarcula californiae icosahedral virus 1 (HCIV-1) originated from high-salinity conditions, it tolerates high ionic strength as well as low-ionic-strength environments
HCIV-1 preserved its infectivity in the designed HCIV-1 buffer with a total salinity level of ~6.6% for the 2-week period of testing
Summary
Archaea dominate in extreme environments; ~140 known archaeal viruses have been isolated, mainly from geothermal springs and high-salinity environments (1). Of particular interest are the tailless icosahedral viruses that contain an internal membrane These viruses infect crenarchea, euryarchaea, bacteria, or eukaryotes, and PRD1 serves for them as a model (2). Each virus structural lineage comprises viruses sharing the same major capsid protein (MCP) fold and virion architecture, and so far, four lineages have been established (14). One of these is the PRD1-adenovirus lin-. A group of PRD1-adenovirus-like viruses with two MCPs instead of one, known as the vertical single -barrel viruses, has been identified This group comprises bacteriophages P23-77 (19), IN93 (20), and SSIP-1 (Salisaeta icosahedral phage 1) (21) and several proviruses (10, 22, 23) as well as SH1 (5), SNJ1 (8), HHIV-2 (9, 24), and PH1 (10).
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