| Literature DB >> 27855181 |
Elliot W Jackson1, Kalia S I Bistolas1, Jason B Button1, Ian Hewson1.
Abstract
Echinoderms are prone to large population fluctuations that can be mediated by pervasive disease events. For the majority of echinoderm disease events the causative pathogen is unknown. Viruses have only recently been explored as potential pathogens using culture-independent techniques though little information currently exists on echinoderm viruses. In this study, ten circular ssDNA viruses were discovered in tissues among an asteroid (Asterias forbesi), an echinoid (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) and a holothurian (Parastichopus californicus) using viral metagenomics. Genome architecture and sequence similarity place these viruses among the rapidly expanding circular rep-encoding single stranded (CRESS) DNA viral group. Multiple genomes from the same tissue were no more similar in sequence identity to each other than when compared to other known CRESS DNA viruses. The results from this study are the first to describe a virus from a holothurian and continue to show the ubiquity of these viruses among aquatic invertebrates.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27855181 PMCID: PMC5113903 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Genome illustrations of ssDNA viruses.
Genome description, coverage and characteristics of ssDNA viruses identified in this study based on genomic features.
| Host | Collection Site | Name | Health status upon collection | Genome Coverage | Genome Size (nt) | Putative | Putative | Nonanucleotide motif | Type | Orientation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nahant Bay, Massachusetts | AfaCV2 | Symptomatic | 16 | 1,704 | 293 | 215 | CAGTATTAC | IV | Ambisense | |
| AfaCV3 | 64 | 2,129 | 316 | 302* | CAGTATTAC | IV | Ambisense | |||
| AfaCV4 | 205 | 3,192 | 285 | 245 | TAGTATTAC | V | Unisense | |||
| AfaCV5 | 44 | 1,879 | 286 | 289 | TAGTATTAC | IV | Ambisense | |||
| Vancouver, British Columbia | SdaCV1 | Asymptomatic | 349 | 2,214 | 270 | 356 | TAGTATTAC | II | Ambisense | |
| SdaCV2 | 380 | 2,703 | 275† | 467 | CAGTATTAC | II | Ambisense | |||
| Ketchikan, Alaska | PcaCV1 | Asymptomatic | 273 | 1,970 | 307 | 279 | CAATATTAC | V | Unisense | |
| PcaCV2 | 2,270 | 2,059 | 318† | 243 | TAGTATTAC | I | Ambisense | |||
| PcaCV3 | 131 | 2,569 | 214† | 314* | CAGTATTAC | VI | Unisense | |||
| PcaCV4 | 1,989 | 2,200 | 292 | 345 | AATTATTAC | VI | Unisense |
1 Organisms labeled as symptomatic exhibited signs of disease (loss of arm, epidermal lesions, loss of turgor).
2Non-rep encoding ORFs were identified as putative capsid proteins based on BLASTx results against the NCBI non-redundant database. Non-rep-encoding ORFs that did not have significant similarity (evalue < 1e-5) are denoted (*).
3 Genomes containing multiple ORFS encoding the same putative function are marked with (†). The ORF with the lowest evalue from the BLASTx results against the NCBI non-redundant database are represented in this table.
Fig 2Pairwise amino acid sequence identity analysis of the putative rep genes including sequences with strong similarity based on BLASTx results against the NCBI non-redundant database.
Arrows indicate genomes obtained in this study.