Niche-dependent genetic diversity in Antarctic metaviromes

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Authors

Van Zyl, Lonnie
Cary, Stephen Craig

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Abstract

The metaviromes from 2 different Antarctic terrestrial soil niches have been analyzed. Both hypoliths (microbial assemblages beneath transluscent rocks) and surrounding open soils showed a high level diversity of tailed phages, viruses of algae and amoeba, and virophage sequences. Comparisons of other global metaviromes with the Antarctic libraries showed a niche-dependent clustering pattern, unrelated to the geographical origin of a given metavirome. Within the Antarctic open soil metavirome, a putative circularly permuted, »42kb dsDNA virus genome was annotated, showing features of a temperate phage possessing a variety of conserved protein domains with no significant taxonomic affiliations in current databases.

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Keywords

Antarctica, Caudovirales, Hypolith, Metaviromics, Temperate phage, Virophage

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Zablocki, O, Van Zyl, L, Adriaenssens, EM, Rubagotti, E, Tuffin, MI, Cary, SC & Cowan DA 2014, 'Niche-dependent genetic diversity in Antarctic metaviromes', Bacteriophage, vol. 4, no. 4, e980125, pp. 1-6.