| Literature DB >> 24278736 |
Paul Hyman1, Stephen T Abedon.
Abstract
Life forms can be roughly differentiated into those that are microscopic versus those that are not as well as those that are multicellular and those that, instead, are unicellular. Cellular organisms seem generally able to host viruses, and this propensity carries over to those that are both microscopic and less than truly multicellular. These viruses of microorganisms, or VoMs, in fact exist as the world's most abundant somewhat autonomous genetic entities and include the viruses of domain Bacteria (bacteriophages), the viruses of domain Archaea (archaeal viruses), the viruses of protists, the viruses of microscopic fungi such as yeasts (mycoviruses), and even the viruses of other viruses (satellite viruses). In this paper we provide an introduction to the concept of viruses of microorganisms, a.k.a., viruses of microbes. We provide broad discussion particularly of VoM diversity. VoM diversity currently spans, in total, at least three-dozen virus families. This is roughly ten families per category-bacterial, archaeal, fungal, and protist-with some virus families infecting more than one of these microorganism major taxa. Such estimations, however, will vary with further discovery and taxon assignment and also are dependent upon what forms of life one includes among microorganisms.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24278736 PMCID: PMC3820453 DOI: 10.6064/2012/734023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientifica (Cairo) ISSN: 2090-908X
Summary of current classification of viruses of microorganisms1.
| Family2 | Genera | Genome | Microbe3 | Additional |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ampullaviridae |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Bottle shaped |
| Bicaudaviridae |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Lemon shaped prior to growing two tails |
| Clavaviridae |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Bacilliform |
| Corticoviridae |
| dsDNA | Bacteria | Lipid containing |
| Fuselloviridae |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Spindle shaped |
| Globuloviridae |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Spherical |
| Guttaviridae |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Droplet shaped |
| Lipothrixviridae |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Filamentous |
|
| dsDNA | Archaea | Filamentous | |
|
| dsDNA | Archaea | Filamentous | |
|
| dsDNA | Archaea | Filamentous | |
| Mimiviridae |
| dsDNA | Protista | Complex, lipid-containing, icosahedral capsid |
| (C.) Myoviridae | [numerous genera] | dsDNA | Bacteria | Contractile tail |
| Φ | dsDNA | Archaea | Contractile tail | |
| Phycodnaviridae |
| dsDNA | Protista | Icosahedral |
|
| dsDNA | Protista | Icosahedral | |
|
| dsDNA | Protista | Icosahedral | |
|
| dsDNA | Protista | Icosahedral | |
|
| dsDNA | Protista | Icosahedral | |
| Plasmaviridae |
| dsDNA | Bacteria | Lipid containing |
| (C.) Podoviridae | [numerous genera] | dsDNA | Bacteria | Short tail (non-cont.) |
| Rudiviridae |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Rod shaped |
| (C.) Siphoviridae | [numerous genera] | dsDNA | Bacteria | Long tail (non-cont.) |
| (C.) |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Long tail (non-cont.) |
| Tectiviridae |
| dsDNA | Bacteria | Lipid containing |
| [unassigned] |
| dsDNA | Protista | Complex, lipid-containing, icosahedral capsid |
| [unassigned] |
| dsDNA | Archaea | Spindle shaped |
| Inoviridae |
| ssDNA | Bacteria | Filamentous |
|
| ssDNA | Bacteria | Filamentous | |
| Microviridae (G.) |
| ssDNA | Bacteria | Icosahedral |
|
| ssDNA | Bacteria | Icosahedral | |
|
| ssDNA | Bacteria | Icosahedral | |
| Microviridae |
| ssDNA | Bacteria | Icosahedral |
| [unassigned] |
| ssDNA | Protista | Icosahedral |
| [unassigned] | ssDNA | Archaea | Lipid containing | |
| [unassigned] | ssDNA | Fungi | Spherical or icosahedral (geminivirus like) | |
| Chrysoviridae |
| dsRNA | Fungi | Icosahedral |
| Cystoviridae |
| dsRNA | Bacteria | Lipid containing |
| Endornaviridae |
| dsRNA | Fungi | Unencapsidated |
|
| dsRNA | Protista | Unencapsidated | |
| Hypoviridae |
| dsRNA | Fungi | Pleomorphic cytoplasmic vesicles |
| Megabirnaviridae |
| dsRNA | Fungi | Spherical |
| Partitiviridae |
| dsRNA | Fungi | Icosahedral |
|
| dsRNA | Protista | Icosahedral | |
| Reoviridae (Se.) |
| dsRNA | Protista | Icosahedral |
| Reoviridae (Sp.) |
| dsRNA | Fungi | Spherical, double shelled |
| Totiviridae |
| dsRNA | Protista | Icosahedral |
|
| dsRNA | Protista | Icosahedral | |
|
| dsRNA | Fungi | Icosahedral | |
|
| dsRNA | Protista | Icosahedral | |
|
| dsRNA | Fungi | Icosahedral | |
| [unassigned] |
| dsRNA | Protista | Icosahedral |
| (T.) Alphaflexiviridae |
| ssRNA (+) | Fungi | Filamentous |
|
| ssRNA (+) | Fungi | Filamentous | |
| Alvernaviridae |
| ssRNA (+) | Protista | Icosahedral |
| (P.) Bacillariornaviridae5 |
| ssRNA (+) | Protista | Icosahedral |
| (T.) Gammaflexiviridae |
| ssRNA (+) | Fungi | Filamentous |
| (P.) Labyrnaviridae7 |
| ssRNA (+) | Protista | Icosahedral |
| Leviviridae |
| ssRNA (+) | Bacteria | Icosahedral |
|
| ssRNA (+) | Bacteria | Icosahedral | |
| Marnaviridae |
| ssRNA (+) | Protista | Icosahedral |
| Pseudoviridae |
| ssRNA (+) | Yeast | Icosahedral/spherical |
| Pseudoviridae |
| ssRNA (+) | Protista | Icosahedral/spherical |
|
| ssRNA (+) | Fungi | Icosahedral/spherical | |
|
| ssRNA (+) | Protista | Icosahedral/spherical | |
| Metaviridae |
| ssRNA (+) | Fungi | Uncertain |
|
| ssRNA (+) | Protista | Uncertain | |
| Narnaviridae |
| ssRNA (+) | Fungi | Unencapsidated |
1List does not include numerous unclassified viruses.
2Addenda to classifications are supplied where present. These include (C.) order Caudovirales, (G.) subfamily Gokushovirinae, (P.) order Picornavirales, (Se.) subfamily Sedoreovirinae, (Sp.) subfamily Spinareovirinae, (T.) order Tymovirales.
3Domain Archaea, domain Bacteria, kingdom Fungi, or kingdom Protista, the latter of Whittaker's [83] Five-Kingdom System.
4Contains approximately 1 kb of dsDNA region within approximately 6 kb genomes; may also be listed as Bacillariodnavirus, in either case serving as conjunctions of “Bacillariophyta”, “DNA”, and “virus”.
5This taxon is not ICTV listed.
6Bacillariornaviridae Bacillariornavirus is listed as the taxonomic description of Chaetoceros socialis f. radians RNA virus, a diatom virus, by both the RNA Virus Database (http://newbioafrica.mrc.ac.za/rnavirusdb/) and NCBI. In Tomaru et al. [84] the isolation of this virus is described and they propose there its classification also into family Bacillariornaviridae. The same virus, however, is indicated as belonging to the genus Bacillarnavirus by ICTV, with unassigned family, and so too does Tomaru et al. [85]. The type species of this group of viruses, Rhizosolenia setigera RNA virus 01 (also a diatom virus), as well as Chaetoceros tenuissimus RNA virus 01, neither of which is indexed by NCBI, appears to be associated exclusively with Bacillarnavirus both by ICTV and online sources. In any case, the terms are conjunctions of “Bacillariophyta”, “RNA”, and “virus”.
7This taxon is not ICTV listed.
8This taxon is not ICTV listed.
Figure 1Bacteriophage families, morphologies, genome types, and relative genome sizes (keeping in mind that in many cases substantial variance is seen within categories, particularly for the tailed phages, in terms of both genome size and virion morphology). Phages are arranged in order of decreasing genome sizes. Blue coloration indicates capsids, red indicates tails, and yellow refers to lipids. Tailed phages are members of virus order Caudovirales. The figure is partially based upon those used in Ackermann [17], Hyman and Abedon [18], and Abedon [19]. Note that virion particles are not drawn to scale.
Figure 2Comparison of phage genome sizes as differentiated by family. Genome sizes are as provided by NCBI (follow the Viruses link from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome). Phage morphologies are provided also by NCBI but we defer to the International Committee for Virus Taxonomy given conflict between the two (http://www.ictvonline.org/). In addition, there are older sequences along with one newer sequence (phage G) that are not yet found on the above NCBI database page that we have included. These are for Enterobacteria phage SP (microvirus), Enterobacteria phage Fr (microvirus), Enterobacteria phage GA (microvirus), Bacillus phage G (myovirus), Bacillus phage PZA (podovirus), and Streptococcus phage SMP (siphovirus). Not included are genome sizes associated with unclassified phages. Total numbers of genomes included are as follows (if there are two numbers then the first is as found in the earlier version of this figure [19] and the second as found here): Leviviridae (10), Microviridae (17), Inoviridae (28→31), Corticoviridae (1), Plasmaviridae (1), Cystoviridae (5), Tectiviridae (4), Podoviridae (92→108), Siphoviridae (253→291), and Myoviridae (115→147). Purple refers to RNA genomes, red to ssDNA genomes, blue to dsDNA genomes as found in lipid-containing and tailless virions, and green, as indicated in the figure, are dsDNA in tailed and lipid-less virus particles.
Figure 3Schematic representation of various Crenarchaeotavirion morphologies. Reading clockwise from the left, bottle shaped (blue) is the morphology of family Ampullaviridae. The spindle shape is associated with family Fuselloviridae as well as the otherwise unassigned genus Salterprovirus (red). The enveloped Lipothrixviridae are filamentous (fuchsia), with various end-cap adornments not shown. There are four genera associated with this family, Alphalipothrixvirus, Betalipothrixvirus, Gammalipothrixvirus, and Deltalipothrixvirus, with the Alphalipothrixvirus virions somewhat broader relative to length than the others. The rod-shaped viruses, yellow with black ornamentation, are members of family Rudiviridae. Note the terminal fibers located in the figure at the bottom of the virion. The two-tailed virus (green) is classified as a member of family Bicaudaviridae. Its tails form morphologically only following virion release from its parental cell. Lastly, family Guttaviridae (orange, middle) possess droplet-shaped virions, shown with representations of fibers starburst shape found at their “tail” (right) end. Virions are not drawn to scale.
Representative sequenced archaeal viruses emphasizing diversity of virion structure.
| Virus host9 | Virus name | Family (genus) [description] | Type10 | Genome | Size (GenBank accession number) | Source | Reference11 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (C.) |
| Ampullaviridae ( | Yes | dsDNA linear | 23,814 nt (NC_009452) | Solfatara volcano water reservoir, Pozzuoli, Italy | Peng et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Bicaudaviridae ( | Yes | dsDNA circular | 62,730 nt (NC_007409) | Hot (87–93°C) acidic (pH 1.5–2) spring, solfataric field, Pozzuoli, Naples, Italy | Prangishvili et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Lipothrixviridae
12 ( | Yes | dsDNA linear | 20,869 nt (NC_005830) | Acidic hot spring (85°C, pH 2), Crater Hills region, YNP13 | Bettstetter et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Lipothrixviridae ( | Yes | dsDNA linear | 31,787 nt (NC_009884) | Lake in crater, Solfatara volcano, Pozzuoli, Italy, with underlying hot springs (87–93°C, pH 1.5–2) | Häring et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Clavaviridae ( | Yes | dsDNA circular | 5,278 nt (AB537968) | Coastal hot spring in Yamagawa, Ibusuki City, Kagoshima, Japan. | Mochizuki et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Globuloviridae ( | Yes | dsDNA linear | 28,337 nt (NC_005872) | Bioreactor based on Obsidian Pool, YNP | Häring et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Lipothrixviridae ( | Yes | dsDNA linear | 40,900 nt (NC_003214) | Solfataric fields, Iceland | Arnold et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Rudiviridae | Yes | dsDNA linear | 35,450 nt (NC_004086) | Solfataric fields, Iceland | Prangishvili et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Guttaviridae ( | Yes | dsDNA circular | 20 kb (not sequenced) | Isolated from carrier state15 with host | Arnold et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Fuselloviridae ( | Yes | dsDNA circular | 15,465 nt (NC_001338) | Lysogen isolated from Beppu Hot Springs, Japan | Schleper et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Unclassified [icosahedral, “turret”-like projections, surrounding lipid that in turn surrounds viral DNA] | dsDNA circular | 17,663 nt (NC_005892) | Acidic (pH 2.9–3.9) hot spring (72–92°C), Rabbit Creek Thermal Area, YNP | Rice et al. [ | |
|
| |||||||
| (C.) |
| Lipothrixviridae ( | Yes | dsDNA linear | 13,669 nt (X14855) | Lysogen isolated from mud hole (93°C, pH 6), Krafla, Iceland | Janekovic et al. [ |
|
| |||||||
| (E.) | His1 virus | [spindle/lemon-shaped, short “tail”-like fiber] ( | Yes | dsDNA linear | 14,462 nt (NC_007914) | Hypersaline water, Avalon Saltern, Corio Bay, Victoria, Australia | Bath and Dyall-Smith [ |
|
| |||||||
| (E.) | Halovirus SH1 (a.k.a., | Unclassified [icosahedral and lipid containing] | dsDNA linear | 30,889 nt (NC_007217) | Hypersaline, Serpentine Lake, Rottnest Island, Western Australia, Australia | Porter et al. [ | |
|
| |||||||
| (E.) |
| Myoviridae [=contractile tail] (Φ | dsDNA linear | 77,670 nt (NC_003345) | Saltern, Geelong, Victoria, Australia | Tang et al. [ | |
|
| |||||||
| (E.) |
| Unclassified [lipid-containing virion] | ssDNA circular | 7,048 nt (NC_012558) | Solar saltern, Trapani, Sicily, Italy |
Pietilä et al. [ | |
|
| |||||||
| (E.) |
| Siphoviridae [=long, non-contractile tail] ( | Yes | dsDNA linear | >26,111 nt18 (NC_001902) | Experimental autodigester (55–60°C) | Meile et al. [ |
9(C.): Crenarchaeota. (E.): Euryarchaeota.
10Viral type species.
11Additional references were also consulted in assembling the table, particularly Pina et al. [39] and Krupovic et al. [40].
12Members of family Lipothrixviridae have enveloped, filamentous virions.
13Yellowstone National Park, USA.
14More often found as Sulfolobus ne but is S. neozealandicus in the original publication.
15Carrier state can refer to a number of different phenomena including chronic infections, lytic infection of only a fraction of bacteria in culture, or unstable lysogeny [106] but with archaeal viruses the meaning tends to be synonymous with chronic infections [39].
16Described as S. shibatae B12 by Schleper et al. [96] but as S. acidocaldarius B12 by both Martin et al. [107] and Yeats et al. [97].
17Originally called SAV1 for S. acidocaldarius virus [107].
18Archaeal virus ψM2 is a spontaneous deletion mutant of ψM1 (at least 0.7 kb missing), and we have listed ψM2's genome length and accession number; within virions, ψM1 possesses ~3 kb of circular redundancy, and as reviewed by Pfister et al. [105], “phage particles have been shown by electron microscopy to contain 30.4 ± 1.0 kb of DNA.”
Notable viruses of protists.
| Virus name | Family | Type19 | Genome type (segments), morphology, size, GenBank accession number or reference (if available) | Host type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | ||||
|
| Phycodnaviridae
| Yes | dsDNA, icosahedral, 330,611 nt (NC_000852) | Algae |
|
| Phycodnaviridae | Yes | dsDNA, icosahedral, 407,339 nt (NC_007346) | Algae |
|
| Phycodnaviridae | Yes | dsDNA, icosahedral (NCBI taxonomic ID = 373996) | Algae |
|
| Phycodnaviridae | Yes | dsDNA, icosahedral (NCBI taxonomic ID = 352209) | Algae |
|
| Phycodnaviridae | Yes | dsDNA, icosahedral (NCBI taxonomic ID = 97195) | Algae |
|
| Unassigned | Yes | dsDNA, complex, lipid-containing, icosahedral based (NCBI taxonomic ID = 650121) | Algae |
|
| Unassigned | Yes | ssDNA, icosahedral | Algae |
|
| Reoviridae
| Yes | dsRNA (11 segments), icosahedral, 25563 nt (NC_008177, NC_008178, NC_008171, NC_008180, NC_008179, NC_008176, NC_008181, NC_008172, NC_008173, NC_008174, NC_008175) | Algae |
|
| Alvernaviridae
| Yes | ssRNA (+), icosahedral | Algae |
|
| Labyrnaviridae
| ssRNA (+), icosahedral, 9035 nt (NC_007522) | Algae | |
|
| Marnaviridae | Yes | ssRNA (+), icosahedral, 8,587 nt (NC_005281) | Algae |
|
| Pseudoviridae | ssRNA (+), icosahedral/spherical | Algae | |
|
| Pseudoviridae | ssRNA (+), icosahedral/spherical | Algae | |
|
| Unassigned | Yes | ssRNA (+), icosahedral | Algae |
|
| Pseudoviridae | ssRNA (+), icosahedral/spherical | Cellular slime mold | |
|
| Mimiviridae | Yes | dsDNA, complex, lipid-containing, icosahedral | Protozoa |
|
| Mimiviridae | dsDNA, icosahedral, 1,259,197 nt (JN258408) | Protozoa | |
|
| Mimiviridae | dsDNA, icosahedral, 1,191,693 nt (JF801956) | Protozoa | |
|
| Mimiviridae | dsDNA, icosahedral, ~1,015,033 nt (calculated from multiple contig sequences; JN885994–JN886001) | Protozoa | |
|
| Mimiviridae | dsDNA, icosahedral, ~1,170,106 nt (calculated from multiple contig sequences; JN885990–JN885993) | Protozoa | |
|
| Mimiviridae | dsDNA, icosahedral, 617,453 nt (NC_014637) | Protozoa | |
|
| Marseilleviridae
| Yes24 | dsDNA, icosahedral, 368,454 nt (NC_013756) | Protozoa |
|
| Marseilleviridae | dsDNA, icosahedral, 346,754 nt (NC_015326) | Protozoa | |
|
| Totiviridae | Yes | dsRNA, icosahedral, 6,277 nt (NC_003555) | Protozoa |
|
| Totiviridae | Yes | dsRNA, icosahedral, 5,284 nt (NC_002063) | Protozoa |
|
| Totiviridae | Yes | dsRNA, icosahedral, 4,657 nt (JF436869) | Protozoa |
|
| Partitiviridae | Yes | dsRNA, icosahedral [ | Protozoa |
|
| Endornaviridae | dsRNA, unencapsidated, 13,883 nt (AJ877914) | Water mold | |
|
| Unassigned | Yes | dsRNA, icosahedra [ | Water mold |
19Viral type species.
20Contains approximately 1 kb of dsDNA region within approximately 6 kb genomes; may also be listed as Bacillariodnavirus, in either case serving as conjunctions of “Bacillariophyta”, “DNA”, and “virus”.
21These taxa are not ICTV listed.
22See Table 1 for further discussion of this taxon.
23Proposed taxa; see text.
24Proposed type species.
Figure 4Summary of sources of DNA available for recombination by viruses of various protists. Any DNA that is able to find its way into a cell's cytoplasm, even accidentally, has a potential to become incorporated into preexisting DNA found within that cell, either as associated with the cell nucleus or with the virion factory structure (yellow) of infecting DNA viruses [62, 69, 71]. This illustration is also an elaboration on the “You are what you eat” hypothesis of Ford Doolittle [75] as elaborated further upon also by Andersson [76], Keeling and Palmer [77], and Abedon [30].
Notable viruses of yeasts, molds, and pathogenic fungi.
| Virus name | (Order) family [subfamily] | Type25 | Genome type (segments), morphology, size, GenBank | Host type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | accession number or reference (if available) | |||
|
| Totiviridae | Yes | dsRNA (1), icosahedral, 4,579 nt (NC_003745) | Yeast |
|
| ||||
|
| Pseudoviridae | Yes | ssRNA (+) (1), icosahedral/spherical | Yeast |
|
| ||||
|
| Pseudoviridae | Yes | ssRNA (+) (1), icosahedral/spherical | Yeast |
|
| ||||
|
| Metaviridae | Yes | ssRNA (+) (1), uncertain | Yeast |
|
| ||||
|
| Narnaviridae | Yes | ssRNA (+) (1), unencapsidated, 2,514 nt (NC_004051) | Yeast |
|
| ||||
|
| Partitiviridae | dsRNA (1), icosahedral | Mold26 | |
|
| ||||
|
| Chrysoviridae | Yes | dsRNA (4), icosahedral, 12,640 nt (NC_007542, NC_007539, NC_007541, NC_007540) | Mold |
|
| ||||
|
| Partitiviridae | dsRNA (2), icosahedral, 3,090 nt (NC_003886, NC_003885) | Human pathogen | |
|
| ||||
|
| Totiviridae | dsRNA (1), icosahedral, 5,196 nt (NC_014823) | Mosquito pathogen | |
|
| ||||
|
| Totiviridae | Yes | dsRNA (1), icosahedral, 5,179 nt (NC_003607) | Plant pathogen |
|
| ||||
|
| Hypoviridae | Yes | dsRNA (1), pleomorphic cytoplasmic vesicles, 12,734 nt (NC_001492) | Plant pathogen |
|
| ||||
|
| Endornaviridae | dsRNA (1), unencapsidated, 16,614 nt (NC_013447) | Plant pathogen | |
|
| ||||
| Mycoreovirus 1 (of | Reoviridae [Spinareovirinae] | Yes | dsRNA (11), spherical, double shelled, 23,433 nt (NC_010743, NC_010744, NC_010745) | Plant pathogen |
|
| ||||
|
| Megabirnaviridae | Yes | dsRNA (2), spherical27, 16,111 nt [ | Plant pathogen |
|
| ||||
|
| Unassigned | dsRNA (4), spherical, 17,078 nt (NC_016757, NC_016759, NC_016760, NC_016758) [ | Plant pathogen | |
|
| ||||
|
| Unassigned [Geminiviridae-like] | ssDNA (1), spherical or icosahedral, 2166 nt [ | Plant pathogen | |
|
| ||||
|
| (Tymovirales) Alphaflexiviridae | Yes | ssRNA (+) (1), filamentous, 5,470 nt (NC_007415) | Plant pathogen |
|
| ||||
|
| (Tymovirales) Gammaflexiviridae | Yes | ssRNA (+) (1), filamentous, 6,827 nt (NC_002604) | Plant pathogen |
|
| ||||
|
| (Tymovirales) Alphaflexiviridae | Yes | ssRNA (+) (1), filamentous, 6,966 nt (NC_005132) | Plant pathogen |
|
| ||||
|
| Narnaviridae | Yes | ssRNA (+) (1), unencapsidated | Plant pathogen |
25Viral type species.
26Host is Aspergillus ochraceus.
27Chiba et al. [110, 111] describe the virions as “spherical” but the published electron micrographs are also suggestive of icosahedral.