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© Research
Publication : Journal of Virology

Ambiviricota, a novel ribovirian phylum for viruses with viroid-like properties

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Journal of Virology - 23 Jul 2024

Kuhn JH, Botella L, de la Peña M, Vainio EJ, Krupovic M, Lee BD, Navarro B, Sabanadzovic S, Simmonds P, Turina M

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 38856119

Link to DOI – 10.1128/jvi.00831-24

J Virol 2024 Jul; 98(7): e0083124

Fungi harbor a vast diversity of mobile genetic elements (MGEs). Recently, novel fungal MGEs, tentatively referred to as ‘ambiviruses,’ were described. ‘Ambiviruses’ have single-stranded RNA genomes of about 4-5 kb in length that contain at least two open reading frames (ORFs) in non-overlapping ambisense orientation. Both ORFs are conserved among all currently known ‘ambiviruses,’ and one of them encodes a distinct viral RNA-directed RNA polymerase (RdRP), the hallmark gene of ribovirian kingdom Orthornavirae. However, ‘ambivirus’ genomes are circular and predicted to replicate via a rolling-circle mechanism. Their genomes are also predicted to form rod-like structures and contain ribozymes in various combinations in both sense and antisense orientations-features reminiscent of viroids, virusoids, ribozyvirian kolmiovirids, and yet-unclassified MGEs (such as ‘epsilonviruses,’ ‘zetaviruses,’ and some ‘obelisks’). As a first step toward the formal classification of ‘ambiviruses,’ the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) recently approved the establishment of a novel ribovirian phylum, Ambiviricota, to accommodate an initial set of 20 members with well-annotated genome sequences.