Virus Research (Jan 2024)

Vibrio cyclitrophicus phage encoding gene transfer agent fragment, representing a novel viral family

  • Yao Xiong,
  • Keran Ma,
  • Xiao Zou,
  • Yantao Liang,
  • Kaiyang Zheng,
  • Tiancong Wang,
  • Hong Zhang,
  • Yue Dong,
  • Ziyue Wang,
  • Yundan Liu,
  • Hongbing Shao,
  • Andrew McMinn,
  • Min Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 339
p. 199270

Abstract

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Vibrio is a prevalent bacterial genus in aquatic environments and exhibits diverse metabolic capabilities, playing a vital role in marine biogeochemical cycles. This study isolated a novel virus infecting Vibrio cyclitrophicus, vB_VviC_ZQ26, from coastal waters near Qingdao, China. The vB_VviC_ZQ26 comprises a linear double-stranded DNA genome with a length of 42,982 bp and a G + C content of 43.21 %, encoding 72 putative open reading frames (ORFs). Transmission electron microscope characterization indicates a siphoviral-morphology of vB_VviC_ZQ26. Nucleic-acids-wide analysis indicates a tetranucleotide frequency deviation for genomic segments encoding putative gene transfer agent protein (GTA) and coil-containing protein, implying divergent origins occurred in different parts of viral genomes. Phylogenetic and genome-content-based analysis suggest that vB_VviC_ZQ26 represents a novel vibriophage-specific family designated as Coheviridae. From the result of biogeographic analysis, Coheviridae is mainly colonized in the temperate and tropical epipelagic zones. This study describes a novel vibriophage infecting V. cyclitrophicus, shedding light on the evolutionary divergence of different parts of the viral genome and its ecological footprint in marine environments.

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