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Three new clades of putative viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerases with rare or unique catalytic triads discovered in libraries of ORFans from powdery mildews and the yeast of oenological interest Starmerella bacillaris
Author(s) -
Marco Forgia,
Marco Chiapello,
Stefania Daghino,
Davide Pacifico,
Dalila Crucitti,
Daniele Oliva,
Marı́a A. Ayllón,
Massimo Turina
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
virus evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.231
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 2057-1577
DOI - 10.1093/ve/veac038
Subject(s) - biology , rna , genetics , clade , computational biology , gene , dna , phylogenetics
High throughput sequencing allowed the discovery of many new viruses and viral organizations increasing our comprehension of virus origin and evolution. Most RNA viruses are currently characterized through similarity searches of annotated virus databases. This approach limits the possibility to detect completely new virus-encoded proteins with no detectable similarities to existing ones, i.e., ORFan proteins. A strong indication of the ORFan viral origin in a metatranscriptome is the lack of DNA corresponding to an assembled RNA sequence in the biological sample. Furthermore, sequence homology among ORFans and evidence of co-occurrence of these ORFans in specific host individuals, provides further indication of a viral origin. Here we use this theoretical framework to report the finding of three conserved clades of protein-coding RNA segments without a corresponding DNA in fungi. Protein sequence and structural alignment suggest these proteins are distantly related to viral RNA dependent RNA polymerases (RdRP). In these new putative viral RdRP clades no GDD catalytic triad is present, but the most common putative catalytic triad is NDD, and a clade with GDQ, a triad previously unreported at that site. SDD, HDD ADD are also represented. For most members of these three clades, we were able to associate a second genomic segment, coding for a protein of unknown function. We provisionally named this new group of viruses ormycovirus. Interestingly, all the members of one of these sub-clades (gammaormycovirus) accumulate more minus sense RNA than plus sense RNA during infection.

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