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Published May 2022 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Organizing the Global Diversity of Microviruses

Abstract

Microviruses encompass an astonishing array of small, single-stranded DNA phages that, due to the surge in metagenomic surveys, are now known to be prevalent in most environments. Current taxonomy concedes the considerable diversity within this lineage to a single family (the Microviridae), which has rendered it difficult to adequately and accurately assess the amount of variation that actually exists within this group. We amassed and curated the largest collection of microviral genomes to date and, through a combination of protein-sharing networks and phylogenetic analysis, discovered at least three meaningful taxonomic levels between the current ranks of family and genus. When considering more than 13,000 microviral genomes from recognized lineages and as-yet-unclassified microviruses in metagenomic samples, microviral diversity is better understood by elevating microviruses to the level of an order that consists of three suborders and at least 19 putative families, each with their respective subfamilies. These revisions enable fine-scale assessment of microviral dynamics: for example, in the human gut, there are considerable differences in the abundances of microviral families both between urban and rural populations and in individuals over time. In addition, our analysis of genome contents and gene exchange shows that microviral families carry no recognizable accessory metabolic genes and rarely, if ever, engage in horizontal gene transfer across microviral families or with their bacterial hosts. These insights bring microviral taxonomy in line with current developments in the taxonomy of other phages and increase the understanding of microvirus biology.

Additional Information

© 2022 Kirchberger et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Received 1 March 2022; Accepted 15 April 2022; Published 2 May 2022. We thank Kim Hammond for assistance with figures. This study was funded by NIH award R35GM118038 to H.O. P.C.K. planned the study, P.C.K. and Z.A.M. performed analyses, and P.C.K. and H.O. wrote the manuscript. Data availability. The curated database of microviruses, as well as additional microvirus and metagenomic data sets and code used for analysis, are available at https://github.com/martinez-zacharya/MOP-UP. The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Attached Files

Published - mbio.00588-22.pdf

Supplemental Material - mbio.00588-22-sf001.eps

Supplemental Material - mbio.00588-22-sf002.eps

Supplemental Material - mbio.00588-22-sf003.pdf

Supplemental Material - mbio.00588-22-st001.xlsx

Supplemental Material - mbio.00588-22-st002.xlsx

Supplemental Material - mbio.00588-22-st003.xlsx

Supplemental Material - mbio.00588-22-st004.xlsx

Supplemental Material - mbio.00588-22-st005.xlsx

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023