Structurally distinct mitoviruses: are they an ancestral lineage of the Mitoviridae exclusive to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Glomeromycotina)?
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2023
abstract:
Mitoviruses in the family Mitoviridae are the mitochondria-replicating
"naked RNA viruses" with genomes encoding only the replicase RNA-dependent RNA
polymerase (RdRp) and prevalent across fungi, plants, and invertebrates. Arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi in the subphylum Glomeromycotina are obligate plant symbionts
that deliver water and nutrients to the host. We discovered distinct mitoviruses in
glomeromycotinian fungi, namely "large duamitovirus," encoding unusually large RdRp
with a unique N-terminal motif that is endogenized in some host genomes. More than
400 viral sequences similar to the large duamitoviruses are present in metatranscrip
tome databases. They are globally distributed in soil ecosystems, consistent with the
cosmopolitan distribution of glomeromycotinian fungi, and formed the most basal clade
of the Mitoviridae in phylogenetic analysis. Given that glomeromycotinian fungi are the
only confirmed hosts of these viruses, we propose the hypothesis that large duamito
viruses are the most ancestral lineage of the Mitoviridae that have been maintained
exclusively in glomeromycotinian fungi.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
mycoviruses; mycorrhizae; Mitoviridae; Glomeromycotina; evolution; plus-strand RNA virus; soil microbiology
List of contributors:
Lanfranco, Luisa; Turina, Massimo
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