Abstract

Virophages are a group of small double-stranded DNA viruses that replicate and proliferate with the help of the viral factory of large host viruses. They are widely distributed in aquatic environments but are more abundant in freshwater ecosystems. Here, we mined the Global Ocean Viromes 2.0 (GOV 2.0) dataset for the diversity, distribution, and association of virophages and their potential host large viruses in marine environments. We identified 94 virophage sequences (>5 kbp in length), of which eight were complete genomes. The MCP phylogenetic tree showed that the GOV virophages were widely distributed on the global virophage tree but relatively clustered on three major branches. The gene-sharing network divided GOV virophages into 21 outliers, 2 overlaps, and 14 viral clusters, of which 4 consisted of only the GOV virophages. We also identified 45 large virus sequences, 8 of which were >100 kbp in length and possibly involved in cell-virus-virophage (C-V-v) trisome relationships. The potential eukaryotic hosts of these eight large viruses and the eight virophages with their complete genomes identified are likely to be algae, based on comparative genomic analysis. Both homologous gene and codon usage analyses support a possible interaction between a virophage (GOVv18) and a large algal virus (GOVLV1). These results indicate that diverse and novel virophages and large viruses are widespread in global marine environments, suggesting their important roles and the presence of complicated unknown C-V-v relationships in marine ecosystems.

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