Niche-dependent genetic diversity in Antarctic metaviromes

The metaviromes from 2 different Antarctic terrestrial soil niches have been analyzed. Both hypoliths (microbial assemblages beneath transluscent rocks) and surrounding open soils showed a high level diversity of tailed phages, viruses of algae and amoeba, and virophage sequences. Comparisons of oth...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Van Zyl, Lonnie, Cary, Stephen Craig, Zablocki, Olivier, Adriaenssens, Evelien M., Rubagotti, Enrico, Tuffin, Marla I., Cowan, Don A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2263/49196
Description
Summary:The metaviromes from 2 different Antarctic terrestrial soil niches have been analyzed. Both hypoliths (microbial assemblages beneath transluscent rocks) and surrounding open soils showed a high level diversity of tailed phages, viruses of algae and amoeba, and virophage sequences. Comparisons of other global metaviromes with the Antarctic libraries showed a niche-dependent clustering pattern, unrelated to the geographical origin of a given metavirome. Within the Antarctic open soil metavirome, a putative circularly permuted, ยป42kb dsDNA virus genome was annotated, showing features of a temperate phage possessing a variety of conserved protein domains with no significant taxonomic affiliations in current databases. National Research Foundation (South Africa) and the Genomics Research Institute of the University of Pretoria (South Africa). http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/kbac20 2015-12-31 hb2015