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© Mart Krupovic, Junfeng Liu
Scanning electron micrograph of Saccharolobus islandicus cells (light blue) infected with the lemon-shaped virus STSV2 (yellow). Artistic rendering by Ala Krupovic.
Publication : Journal of Virology

Gene duplication as a major force driving the genome expansion in some giant viruses

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Journal of Virology - 21 Dec 2023

Machado TB, et al.

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 38092658

Link to DOI – 10.1128/jvi.01309-23

J Virol 2023 Dec; 97(12): e0130923

Giant viruses are noteworthy not only due to their enormous particles but also because of their gigantic genomes. In this context, a fundamental question has persisted: how did these genomes evolve? Here we present the discovery of cedratvirus pambiensis, featuring the largest genome ever described for a cedratvirus. Our data suggest that the larger size of the genome can be attributed to an unprecedented number of duplicated genes. Further investigation of this phenomenon in other viruses has illuminated gene duplication as a key evolutionary mechanism driving genome expansion in diverse giant viruses. Although gene duplication has been described as a recurrent event in cellular organisms, our data highlights its potential as a pivotal event in the evolution of gigantic viral genomes.