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High-Level Diversity of Tailed Phages,Eukaryote-Associated Viruses,and Virophage-Like Elements in the Metaviromes of Antarctic Soils
Authors:Olivier Zablocki  Lonnie van Zyl  Evelien M Adriaenssens  Enrico Rubagotti  Marla Tuffin  Stephen Craig Cary  Don Cowan
Institution:aCentre for Microbial Ecology and Genomics, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa ;bInstitute for Microbial Biotechnology and Metagenomics, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, South Africa ;cThe International Centre for Terrestrial Antarctic Research, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand;dGenomics Research Institute, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa
Abstract:The metaviromes of two distinct Antarctic hyperarid desert soil communities have been characterized. Hypolithic communities, cyanobacterium-dominated assemblages situated on the ventral surfaces of quartz pebbles embedded in the desert pavement, showed higher virus diversity than surface soils, which correlated with previous bacterial community studies. Prokaryotic viruses (i.e., phages) represented the largest viral component (particularly Mycobacterium phages) in both habitats, with an identical hierarchical sequence abundance of families of tailed phages (Siphoviridae > Myoviridae > Podoviridae). No archaeal viruses were found. Unexpectedly, cyanophages were poorly represented in both metaviromes and were phylogenetically distant from currently characterized cyanophages. Putative phage genomes were assembled and showed a high level of unaffiliated genes, mostly from hypolithic viruses. Moreover, unusual gene arrangements in which eukaryotic and prokaryotic virus-derived genes were found within identical genome segments were observed. Phycodnaviridae and Mimiviridae viruses were the second-most-abundant taxa and more numerous within open soil. Novel virophage-like sequences (within the Sputnik clade) were identified. These findings highlight high-level virus diversity and novel species discovery potential within Antarctic hyperarid soils and may serve as a starting point for future studies targeting specific viral groups.
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