生物
基因组
遗传学
基因
核糖核酸
基因组大小
DNA
计算生物学
作者
Didier Raoult,Stéphane Audic,Catherine Robert,Chantal Abergel,Patricia Renesto,Hiroyuki Ogata,Bernard La Scola,Marie Suzan,Jean‐Michel Claverie
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2004-10-15
卷期号:306 (5700): 1344-1350
被引量:994
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.1101485
摘要
We recently reported the discovery and preliminary characterization of Mimivirus, the largest known virus, with a 400-nanometer particle size comparable to mycoplasma. Mimivirus is a double-stranded DNA virus growing in amoebae. We now present its 1,181,404–base pair genome sequence, consisting of 1262 putative open reading frames, 10% of which exhibit a similarity to proteins of known functions. In addition to exceptional genome size, Mimivirus exhibits many features that distinguish it from other nucleocytoplasmic large DNA viruses. The most unexpected is the presence of numerous genes encoding central protein-translation components, including four amino-acyl transfer RNA synthetases, peptide release factor 1, translation elongation factor EF-TU, and translation initiation factor 1. The genome also exhibits six tRNAs. Other notable features include the presence of both type I and type II topoisomerases, components of all DNA repair pathways, many polysaccharide synthesis enzymes, and one intein-containing gene. The size and complexity of the Mimivirus genome challenge the established frontier between viruses and parasitic cellular organisms. This new sequence data might help shed a new light on the origin of DNA viruses and their role in the early evolution of eukaryotes.
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