Abstract

Picobirnaviruses (PBVs) are bisegmented double-stranded RNA viruses that have been detected in a wide variety of animal species including invertebrates and in environmental samples. Since PBVs are ubiquitous in feces/gut contents of humans and other animals with or without diarrhea, they were considered as opportunistic enteric pathogens of mammals and avian species. However, the virus remains to be propagated in animal cell cultures, or in gnotobiotic animals. Recently, the classically defined prokaryotic motif, the ribosomal binding site sequence, has been identified upstream of putative open reading frame/s in PBV and PBV-like sequences from humans, various animals, and environmental samples, suggesting that PBVs might be prokaryotic viruses. On the other hand, based on the detection of some novel PBV-like RNA-dependent RNA polymerase sequences that use the alternative mitochondrial genetic code (that of mold or invertebrates) for translation, and principal component analysis of codon usage bias for these sequences, it has been proposed that PBVs might be fungal viruses with a lifestyle reminiscent of mitoviruses. These contradicting observations warrant further studies to ascertain the true host/s of PBVs, which still remains controversial. In this minireview, we have focused on the various findings that have raised a debate on the true host/s of PBVs.

Highlights

  • Picobirnaviruses (PBVs) are bisegmented double-stranded RNA viruses that belong to the sole genus Picobirnavirus within the family Picobiraviridae [1]

  • Since PBVs have been mostly detected in feces/gut contents of animals and humans with or without diarrhea, they were considered as opportunistic enteric pathogens of mammals [2, 3]

  • The identification of the prokaryotic ribosomal binding site (RBS) sequence upstream of putative open reading frames (ORFs)/s in PBV and PBV-like sequences indicate that PBVs might infect bacteria [7, 8, 13, 21]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Picobirnaviruses (PBVs) are bisegmented double-stranded RNA viruses that belong to the sole genus Picobirnavirus within the family Picobiraviridae [1]. By phylogenetic analysis of RdRp sequences from different virus families, PBVs and partitiviruses (known to infect fungi and plants, and share similarities in capsid architecture and genome organization with PBVs) were found to constitute the partitivirus-picobirnavirus clade, which, interestingly, consisted of some naked RNA replicons that reproduce in algae mitochondria or chloroplasts, translate using a mitochondrial genetic code, and exhibit mitovirus-like behavior [76]. Taken together, these findings suggested that PBVs might be fungal viruses. Further analyses are required to decipher the complex evolution of these PBVlike strains

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