Literature DB >> 6452848

A theory of modular evolution for bacteriophages.

D Botstein.   

Abstract

The modular theory of virus evolution has clear experimental support among the temperate bacteriophages of the enteric bacteria. However, there is also similar genetic and DNA heteroduplex evidence for such evolution among other families of bacteriophages: the virulent bacteriophages of the enterics comprise several families: the T-even group, the T3-T7 group (which has many members among different species of bacteria, including bacteria as widely divergent as E. coli and Caulobacter crescentus. It nicely explains the diffusion of very similar homologous bacteriophages into hosts whose own DNAs have diverged very greatly from each other in nucleotide sequence. It also accounts for the rigorous maintenance of regulatory schemes while units of function (including regions coding for proteins) diverge more rapidly. It should also be noted that the considerations that make modular evolution seem advantageous for bacteriophages apply equally well to viruses of higher organisms. Furthermore, the kinds of heteroduplex similarity observed among animal viruses are reminiscent of what is found for bacteriophages. Viruses found in widely divergent hosts show much greater similarity than would be expected; quite possibly animal viruses also evolve as a population of interchangeable modules.

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Year:  1980        PMID: 6452848     DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1980.tb27987.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  137 in total

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Journal:  J Virol       Date:  1999-10       Impact factor: 5.103

2.  Evidence that a plant virus switched hosts to infect a vertebrate and then recombined with a vertebrate-infecting virus.

Authors:  M J Gibbs; G F Weiller
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1999-07-06       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 3.  Evolution and origins of tobamoviruses.

Authors:  A Gibbs
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  1999-03-29       Impact factor: 6.237

4.  MM1, a temperate bacteriophage of the type 23F Spanish/USA multiresistant epidemic clone of Streptococcus pneumoniae: structural analysis of the site-specific integration system.

Authors:  E Gindreau; R López; P García
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 5.103

5.  Vibrio cholerae phage K139: complete genome sequence and comparative genomics of related phages.

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Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 3.490

Review 6.  Viral evolution and emerging viral infections: what future for the viruses? A theoretical evaluation based on informational spaces and quasispecies.

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Journal:  Virus Genes       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 2.332

7.  Comparisons of two large phaeoviral genomes and evolutionary implications.

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Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 2.395

Review 8.  Bacteriophage lysis: mechanism and regulation.

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Review 9.  Phages and the evolution of bacterial pathogens: from genomic rearrangements to lysogenic conversion.

Authors:  Harald Brüssow; Carlos Canchaya; Wolf-Dietrich Hardt
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 11.056

10.  Bacteriophage Cooperation Suppresses CRISPR-Cas3 and Cas9 Immunity.

Authors:  Adair L Borges; Jenny Y Zhang; MaryClare F Rollins; Beatriz A Osuna; Blake Wiedenheft; Joseph Bondy-Denomy
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2018-07-19       Impact factor: 41.582

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