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Virus World as an Evolutionary Network of Viruses and Capsidless Selfish Elements

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Title Virus World as an Evolutionary Network of Viruses and Capsidless Selfish Elements
Names Koonin, Eugene V. (creator)
Dolja, Valerian V. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-06 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the American Society for Microbiology and can be found at: http://mmbr.asm.org/.
Abstract Viruses were defined as one of the two principal types of organisms
in the biosphere, namely, as capsid-encoding organisms in
contrast to ribosome-encoding organisms, i.e., all cellular life
forms. Structurally similar, apparently homologous capsids are
present in a huge variety of icosahedral viruses that infect bacteria,
archaea, and eukaryotes. These findings prompted the concept of
the capsid as the virus “self” that defines the identity of deep,
ancient viral lineages. However, several other widespread viral
“hallmark genes” encode key components of the viral replication
apparatus (such as polymerases and helicases) and combine with
different capsid proteins, given the inherently modular character
of viral evolution. Furthermore, diverse, widespread, capsidless
selfish genetic elements, such as plasmids and various types of
transposons, share hallmark genes with viruses. Viruses appear to
have evolved from capsidless selfish elements, and vice versa, on
multiple occasions during evolution. At the earliest, precellular
stage of life’s evolution, capsidless genetic parasites most likely
emerged first and subsequently gave rise to different classes of
viruses. In this review, we develop the concept of a greater virus
world which forms an evolutionary network that is held together
by shared conserved genes and includes both bona fide capsid-encoding
viruses and different classes of capsidless replicons. Theoretical
studies indicate that selfish replicons (genetic parasites)
inevitably emerge in any sufficiently complex evolving ensemble
of replicators. Therefore, the key signature of the greater virus
world is not the presence of a capsid but rather genetic, informational
parasitism itself, i.e., various degrees of reliance on the information
processing systems of the host.
Genre Article
Identifier Koonin, E. V., & Dolja, V. V. (2014). Virus World as an Evolutionary Network of Viruses and Capsidless Selfish Elements. Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews, 78(2), 278-303. doi:10.1128/MMBR.00049-13

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