Principles of Virology. Jane Flint

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Principles of Virology - Jane Flint страница 67

Автор:
Жанр:
Серия:
Издательство:
Principles of Virology - Jane Flint

Скачать книгу

rel="nofollow" href="#fb3_img_img_e2ecbdbc-5f17-53ad-82b2-8a6c3ad62530.png" alt="image"/> AlphavirusesFlaviviridae Picornaviridae Retroviridae 6, 116, 116, 116, 11 33, 349, 1021, 2229, 30 Leaky scanning image Orthomyxoviridae Paramyxoviridae Polyomaviridae Retroviridae 11111111 15, 1629, 30 Reinitiation image Orthomyxoviridae Herpesviridae 1111 15, 16 Suppression of termination image AlphavirusesRetroviridae 1111 33, 3429, 30 Ribosomalframeshifting image Astroviridae Coronaviridae Retroviridae 111111 5, 629, 30 IRES image Flaviviridae Picornaviridae 1111 21, 22 Nested mRNAs image Coronaviridae Arteriviridae 66 5, 65, 6

      Despite their utility, genome sequences cannot provide a complete understanding of how viruses reproduce. The genome sequence of a virus is at best a biological “parts list”: it provides some information about the intrinsic properties of a virus (for example, predicted sequences of viral proteins and particle composition), but says little or nothing about how the virus interacts with cells, hosts, and populations. This limitation is best illustrated by the results of environmental metagenomic analyses, which reveal that the number of viruses around us (especially in the sea) is astronomical. Most are uncharacterized and, because their hosts are also unknown, cannot be investigated. A reductionist study of individual components in isolation provides few answers. Although the reductionist approach is often the simplest experimentally, it is also important to understand how the genome behaves among others (population biology) and how the genome changes with time (evolution). Nevertheless, reductionism has provided much-needed detailed information for tractable virus-host systems. These systems allow genetic and biochemical analyses and provide models of infection in vivo and in cells in culture. Unfortunately, viruses and hosts that are difficult or impossible to manipulate in the laboratory remain understudied or ignored.

      All viruses with genome sizes spanning the range from the biggest to the smallest are successful as they continue to reproduce and spread within their hosts. Despite detailed analyses, there is no evidence that one size is more advantageous than another. All viral genomes have evolved under relentless selection, so extremes of size must provide particular advantages. One feature distinguishing large genomes from smaller ones is the presence of many genes that encode proteins for viral genome replication, nucleic acid metabolism, and countering host defense systems. When mimiviruses were first discovered, the surprise was that their genomes encoded components of the protein synthesis system, such as tRNAs and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. Tupanviruses, isolated from soda lakes in Brazil and deep ocean sediments, encode all 20 aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, 70 tRNAs, multiple translation proteins, and more. Only the ribosome is lacking. Why would large viral genomes carry these genes when they are available in their cellular hosts? Perhaps by producing a large part of the translational machinery, viral mRNAs can be more efficiently translated. This explanation is consistent with the finding that the codon and amino acid usage of tupanvirus is different from that of the amoeba that it infects.

      EXPERIMENTS

       Planaria and mollusks yield the biggest RNA genomes

      In the past 20 years the development of high-throughput nucleic acid sequencing methods has rapidly increased the pace of virus discovery. Yet in that time, while the largest DNA genomes have increased nearly

Скачать книгу