Giant Viruses Infecting Algae
- 1 October 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Microbiology
- Vol. 53 (1) , 447-494
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.micro.53.1.447
Abstract
Paramecium bursaria chlorella virus (PBCV-1) is the prototype of a family of large, icosahedral, plaque-forming, double-stranded-DNA-containing viruses that replicate in certain unicellular, eukaryotic chlorella-like green algae. DNA sequence analysis of its 330, 742-bp genome leads to the prediction that this phycodnavirus has 376 protein-encoding genes and 10 transfer RNA genes. The predicted gene products of approximately 40% of these genes resemble proteins of known function. The chlorella viruses have other features that distinguish them from most viruses, in addition to their large genome size. These features include the following: (a) The viruses encode multiple DNA methyltransferases and DNA site-specific endonucleases; (b) PBCV-1 encodes at least part, if not the entire machinery to glycosylate its proteins; (c) PBCV-1 has at least two types of introns--a self-splicing intron in a transcription factor-like gene and a splicesomal processed type of intron in its DNA polymerase gene. Unlike the chlorella viruses, large double-stranded-DNA-containing viruses that infect marine, filamentous brown algae have a circular genome and a lysogenic phase in their life cycle.Keywords
This publication has 209 references indexed in Scilit:
- Virus assembly inHincksia hincksiae (Ectocarpales, Phaeophyceae) An electron and fluorescence microscopic studyProtoplasma, 1998
- Structure-guided Analysis Reveals Nine Sequence Motifs Conserved among DNA Amino-methyl-transferases, and Suggests a Catalytic Mechanism for these EnzymesJournal of Molecular Biology, 1995
- Characterization of a protein kinase gene from two Chlorella virusesVirus Research, 1995
- A Chlorella Virus Gene Promoter Functions as a Strong Promoter Both in Plants and BacteriaBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1994
- Transfer of a marine DNA virus fromEctocarpus toFeldmannia (Ectocarpales, Phaeophyceae): aberrant symptoms and restitution of the hostProtoplasma, 1993
- Ultrastructural studies on a chlorella virus from GermanyArchiv für die gesamte Virusforschung, 1993
- Intergeneric transmission of a marine plant DNA virusThe Science of Nature, 1992
- The mechanism of phage λ site-specific recombination: Site-specific breakage of DNA by Int topoisomeraseCell, 1983
- Comparative studies onChlorella cell walls: Induction of protoplast formationArchiv für Mikrobiologie, 1982
- The ship fouling algaEctocarpusProtoplasma, 1973