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wolbachia

Eukaryotic genes in a bacteriophage

13 October 2016 by Vincent Racaniello

Wolbachia
Wolbachia in an insect cell. Image credit: PLoS/Scott O’Neill.

Viruses are tidily categorized into three groups according to the hosts they infect – bacteriophages, eukaryotic viruses, and archaeal viruses. Viruses do not infect hosts in another domain of life, and therefore lateral gene transfer is limited (giant DNA viruses might be exceptions). Now there is evidence for lateral gene transfer between eukaryotes and bacteriophages.

Proof of this unusual movement of DNA comes from studies of the obligate intracellular bacteria Wolbachia, which infects 40% of arthropods (pictured). Wolbachia are in turn infected with a bacteriophage called WO; nearly all sequenced Wolbachia genomes contain integrated WO DNA. Analysis of complete WO genome sequences revealed the presence of mutiple eukaryotic genes (link to paper) that comprise about half of the phage genome!

Ten different protein domains were identified in the eukaryotic genes of WO phage with four functions: toxins, host-microbe interactions, host cell suicide, and protein secretion through membranes.

One eukaryotic gene in phage WO is a black widow spider toxin called latrotoxin-CTD. Sequence analysis suggests that the spider toxin gene was transferred to phage WO within a Wolbachia genome (these bacteria are known to infect widow spiders).

It is not surprising that a virus of a bacterium that infects a eukaryotic cell might acquire eukaryotic genes, but the exact mechanism of gene transfer is unknown. Eukaryotic DNA might enter the WO genome while the particles are in the insect cell cytoplasm, or during packaging of viral DNA in the presence of animal DNA. Another possibility is transfer of eukaryotic DNA to the Wolbachia genome, and then to phage WO.

The fact that eukaryotic-like DNA sequences make up half of the phage WO genome suggests that they serve important functions for the virus. The functions ascribed to these eukaryotic genes suggest roles in cell lysis, modification of host proteins, and toxicity.

There are other examples of phage-infected obligate intracellular bacteria of Chlamydia, aphids, and tsetse flies. A study of these viral genomes should reveal whether lateral gene transfer between metazoans and bacteriophages is a common mechansim for augmenting functions of the viral genome.

Filed Under: Basic virology, Information Tagged With: bacteriophage, eukaryote, intracellular symbiont, lateral gene transfer, phage WO, viral, virology, virus, viruses, wolbachia

TWiV 388: What could possibly go wrong?

8 May 2016 by Vincent Racaniello

TWiVPreprint servers, the structure of an antibody bound to Zika virus, blocking Zika virus replication in mosquitoes with Wolbachia, and killing carp in Australia with a herpesvirus are topics of episode #388 of the science show This Week in Virology, hosted by Vincent, Dickson, Alan, and Kathy.

You can find TWiV #388 at microbe.tv/twiv, or listen below.

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Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: aedes aegypti, antibody, biological control, biorXiv, carp, Cyprinid herpesvirus 3, Koi, koi herpesvirus, mosquito, myxomavirus, preprint server, rabbits, viral, virology, virus, viruses, wolbachia, zika virus, Zika virus vaccine

TWiV 332: Vanderbilt virology

12 April 2015 by Vincent Racaniello

On episode #332 of the science show This Week in Virology, Vincent visits Vanderbilt University and meets up with Seth, Jim, and Mark to talk about their work on a virus of Wolbachia, anti-viral antibodies, and coronaviruses.

You can find TWiV #332 at www.microbe.tv/twiv.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: antibodies, bacteriophage, coronavirus, ebolavirus, endosymbiont, error correction, evolution, influenza virus, MERS, mutation, neutralization, SARS, viral, virology, virus, wolbachia

TWiV 164: Six steps forward, four steps back

1 January 2012 by Vincent Racaniello

xmrvHosts: Vincent Racaniello, Rich Condit, and Alan Dove

Vincent, Alan, and Rich review ten compelling virology stories of 2011.

Please help us by taking our listener survey.

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Click the arrow above to play, or right-click to download TWiV 164 (60 MB .mp3, 99 minutes).

Subscribe to TWiV (free) in iTunes , at the Zune Marketplace, by the RSS feed, by email, or listen on your mobile device with the Microbeworld app.

Ten virology stories of 2011:

  1. XMRV, CFS, and prostate cancer (TWiV 119, 123, 136, 150)
  2. Influenza H5N1, ferrets, and the NSABB (TWiV 159)
  3. The Panic Virus (TWiV 117)
  4. Polio eradication (TWiV 127, 149)
  5. Viral oncotherapy (TWiV 124, 131, 142, 156)
  6. Hepatitis C virus (TWiV 130, 137, 141)
  7. Zinc finger nuclease and HIV therapy (TWiV 144)
  8. Bacteria help viruses (TWiV 154)
  9. Human papillomaviruses (TWiV 126)
  10. Combating dengue with Wolbachia (TWiV 115, 147)

Links for this episode:

  • Honorable mention: Color me infected (TWiV 115)
  • Lo-Alter retraction (PNAS)
  • Propose an ASM General Meeting session
  • TWiV on Facebook
  • Letters read on TWiV 164

Weekly Science Picks

Rich – Fundamentals of Molecular Virology by Nicholas H. Acheson
Alan – Fetch, with Ruff Ruffman
Vincent – Year end reviews at Rule of 6ix and Contagions

Listener Pick of the Week

Garren – Trillion-frame-per-second video
Judi – iBioMagazine
Ricardo –
Brain Picking’s 11 best science books of 2011

Send your virology questions and comments (email or mp3 file) to twiv@microbe.tv, or call them in to 908-312-0760. You can also post articles that you would like us to discuss at microbeworld.org and tag them with twiv.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: AIDS, anti-vaccine, bioterrorism, CFS, chronic fatigue syndrome, Dengue, H5N1, hepatitis C virus, HIV, HPV, human papillomavirus, influenza, nsabb, panic virus, polio eradication, prostate cancer, retrovirus, symbiosis, vaccination, viral, viral oncotherapy, virology, virus, wolbachia, xmrv, zinc finger

TWiV 147: Debugging dengue

4 September 2011 by Vincent Racaniello

aedes aegypti wolbachiaHosts: Vincent Racaniello, Rich Condit, Dickson Despommier, and Alan Dove

The complete TWiV gang discusses the use of Wolbachia to control mosquito-borne infections.

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Click the arrow above to play, or right-click to download TWiV 147 (64 MB .mp3, 89 minutes).

Subscribe to TWiV (free) in iTunes , at the Zune Marketplace, by the RSS feed, by email, or listen on your mobile device with the Microbeworld app.

Links for this episode:

  • miRNAs and colonization by Wolbachia (PNAS)
  • Wolbachia blocks dengue, invades caged mosquitos (Nature)
  • Establishment of Wolbachia in Aedes populations (Nature)
  • Ed Yong on dengue control by Wolbachia
  • TWiV on Facebook
  • Letters read on TWiV 147

Weekly Science Picks

Alan – Sid the science kid
Dickson –
Through the alimentary canal with gun and camera by George S. Chappell
Vincent –
Rule of 6ix
Rich –
Reality check

Listener Pick of the Week

Liam – Scitable

Send your virology questions and comments (email or mp3 file) to twiv@microbe.tv, or call them in to 908-312-0760. You can also post articles that you would like us to discuss at microbeworld.org and tag them with twiv.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: Dengue, endosymbiont, mosquito, viral, virology, virus, wolbachia

TWiV 115: Color me infected

9 January 2011 by Vincent Racaniello

brainbow pseudorabies virusHosts: Vincent Racaniello, Alan Dove, Rich Condit, and Marc Pelletier

On episode #115 of the podcast This Week in Virology, Vincent, Alan, Rich and Marc discuss the finding that a limited number of incoming herpesviral genomes can replicate and express in a cell, and controlling viral replication in Aedes aegypti with a Wolbachia symbiont.

[powerpress url=”http://traffic.libsyn.com/twiv/TWiV115.mp3″]

Click the arrow above to play, or right-click to download TWiV #115 (84 MB .mp3, 117 minutes).

Subscribe to TWiV (free) in iTunes , at the Zune Marketplace, by the RSS feed, or by email, or listen on your mobile device with Stitcher Radio.

Links for this episode:

  • Replication and expression of limited numbers of incoming viral genomes
  • The brainbow cassette
  • Release of Wolbachia infected mosquitoes in Australia (story one, two)
  • Journal articles on Wolbachia infection of mosquitoes (Cell, PloS Pathogens)
  • Wolbachia discussion on TWiV 61
  • TWiV on Facebook
  • Letters read on TWiV 115

Weekly Science Picks

Marc – Homebrew bioreactor (photo, movie) – culture bottle and drive, oil-free vacuum pumps
Rich –
Logitech Harmony Universal Remote
Alan – H.M.S. Challenger Reports
Vincent – Sequence of the strawberry genome and blog post by lead author

Send your virology questions and comments (email or mp3 file) to twiv@microbe.tv or leave voicemail at Skype: twivpodcast. You can also post articles that you would like us to discuss at microbeworld.org and tag them with twiv.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: aedes aegypti, brainbow, Chikungunya, Dengue, herpesvirus, malaria, mosquito, plaque, pseudorabies virus, replication, viral, virology, virus, wolbachia

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by Vincent Racaniello

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