Targeted diversity generation by intraterrestrial archaea and archaeal viruses.
Blair G PaulSarah C BagbyElizabeth CzornyjDiego ArambulaSumit HandaAlexander SczyrbaPartho GhoshJeff F MillerDavid L ValentinePublished in: Nature communications (2015)
In the evolutionary arms race between microbes, their parasites, and their neighbours, the capacity for rapid protein diversification is a potent weapon. Diversity-generating retroelements (DGRs) use mutagenic reverse transcription and retrohoming to generate myriad variants of a target gene. Originally discovered in pathogens, these retroelements have been identified in bacteria and their viruses, but never in archaea. Here we report the discovery of intact DGRs in two distinct intraterrestrial archaeal systems: a novel virus that appears to infect archaea in the marine subsurface, and, separately, two uncultivated nanoarchaea from the terrestrial subsurface. The viral DGR system targets putative tail fibre ligand-binding domains, potentially generating >10(18) protein variants. The two single-cell nanoarchaeal genomes each possess ≥4 distinct DGRs. Against an expected background of low genome-wide mutation rates, these results demonstrate a previously unsuspected potential for rapid, targeted sequence diversification in intraterrestrial archaea and their viruses.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- copy number
- single cell
- dna methylation
- cancer therapy
- amino acid
- protein protein
- small molecule
- high throughput
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- sars cov
- rna seq
- gram negative
- gene expression
- climate change
- drug delivery
- multidrug resistant
- plasmodium falciparum
- anti inflammatory
- human health
- genome wide identification
- sensitive detection
- genome wide analysis