Abstract

A virus infecting the novel shellfish-killing dinoflagellate Heterocapsa circularisquama (H. circularisquama Virus: HcV) was isolated from Japanese coastal waters in August 1999 during a H. circularisquama bloom. Transmission electron microscopy of ultrathin sections of infected H. cir- cularisquama revealed the presence of intracellular virus-like particles 24 to 48 h after infection. The virus was icosahedral, lacking a tail, ca 180 to 210 nm (mean ± standard deviation = 197 ± 8 nm) in diameter and contained an electron-dense core. It was a double-stranded DNA virus, and the appear- ance of the virus particles was associated with a granular region (viroplasm) in the cytoplasm that did not appear within uninfected cells. The virus caused cell lysis of 18 strains of H. circularisquama iso- lated from various embayments throughout central and western Japan, but did not lyse 24 other phytoplankton species that were tested. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a virus infecting dinoflagellates which has been isolated and maintained in culture, and our results demonstrate that viruses which infect and cause lysis of dinoflagellates are a component of natural marine viral com- munities.

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