Marseilleviridae Lineage B Diversity and Bunch Formation Inhibited by Galactose

Marseilleviridae is a family of large double-stranded DNA viruses that is currently divided into five subgroups, lineages A–E. Hokutovirus and kashiwazakivirus, both of which belong to lineage B, have been reported to induce host acanthamoeba cells to form aggregations called “bunches”. This putativ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microbes and Environments 2021, Vol.36(1), pp.ME20139
Hauptverfasser: Aoki, Keita, Fukaya, Sho, Takahashi, Haruna, Kobayashi, Mio, Sasaki, Kenta, Takemura, Masaharu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Marseilleviridae is a family of large double-stranded DNA viruses that is currently divided into five subgroups, lineages A–E. Hokutovirus and kashiwazakivirus, both of which belong to lineage B, have been reported to induce host acanthamoeba cells to form aggregations called “bunches”. This putatively results in increased opportunities to infect acanthamoeba cells, in contrast to lineage A, which has been reported to not form “bunches”. In the present study, we isolated 14 virus strains of the family Marseilleviridae from several Japanese water samples, 11 of which were identified as lineage B viruses. All 11 lineage B strains caused infected amoeba cells to form bunches. We then investigated the involvement of monosaccharides in bunch formation by amoeba cells infected with hokutovirus. Galactose inhibited bunch formation, thereby allowing amoeba cells to delay the process, whereas mannose and glucose did not. A kinetic image analysis of hokutovirus-infected amoeba cells confirmed the inhibition of bunch formation by galactose. The number of hokutovirus-infected amoeba cells increased more rapidly than that of tokyovirus-infected cells, which belongs to lineage A. This result suggests that bunch formation by infected amoeba cells is advantageous for lineage B viruses.
ISSN:1342-6311
1347-4405
DOI:10.1264/jsme2.ME20139