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Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology Structure of the Acidianus Filamentous Virus 3 and Comparative Genomics of Related Archaeal Lipothrixviruses Centre for Comparative Genomics and Danish Archaea Centre, Department of Molecular Biology, Biocenter, Copenhagen University, Ole Maaløes Vej 5, DK-2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark,1 Institut de Minéralogie et de Physique des Milieux Condensés, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, IMPMC-UMR7590, Paris F-75005, France,2 Molecular Biology of the Gene in Extremophiles Unit, Institut Pasteur, rue du Dr. Roux 25, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France,3 Department of Microbiology, University of Regensburg, Universitätsst. 31, D-93053 Regensburg, Germany4 *Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut Pasteur, rue du Dr. Roux 25, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France. Phone: 33(0)1 44 38 91 19. Fax: 33(0)1 45 68 88 34. E-mail: prangish/at/pasteur.fr Received June 28, 2007; Accepted October 4, 2007. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Four novel filamentous viruses with double-stranded DNA genomes, namely, Acidianus filamentous virus 3 (AFV3), AFV6, AFV7, and AFV8, have been characterized from the hyperthermophilic archaeal genus Acidianus, and they are assigned to the Betalipothrixvirus genus of the family Lipothrixviridae. The structures of the approximately 2-μm-long virions are similar, and one of them, AFV3, was studied in detail. It consists of a cylindrical envelope containing globular subunits arranged in a helical formation that is unique for any known double-stranded DNA virus. The envelope is 3.1 nm thick and encases an inner core with two parallel rows of protein subunits arranged like a zipper. Each end of the virion is tapered and carries three short filaments. Two major structural proteins were identified as being common to all betalipothrixviruses. The viral genomes were sequenced and analyzed, and they reveal a high level of conservation in both gene content and gene order over large regions, with this similarity extending partly to the earlier described betalipothrixvirus Sulfolobus islandicus filamentous virus. A few predicted gene products of each virus, in addition to the structural proteins, could be assigned specific functions, including a putative helicase involved in Holliday junction branch migration, a nuclease, a protein phosphatase, transcriptional regulators, and glycosyltransferases. The AFV7 genome appears to have undergone intergenomic recombination with a large section of an AFV2-like viral genome, apparently resulting in phenotypic changes, as revealed by the presence of AFV2-like termini in the AFV7 virions. Shared features of the genomes include (i) large inverted terminal repeats exhibiting conserved, regularly spaced direct repeats; (ii) a highly conserved operon encoding the two major structural proteins; (iii) multiple overlapping open reading frames, which may be indicative of gene recoding; (iv) putative 12-bp genetic elements; and (v) partial gene sequences corresponding closely to spacer sequences of chromosomal repeat clusters. Studies on viral diversity in hydrothermal sites at temperatures above 80°C have led to the isolation of a range of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) viruses from archaea, with highly diverse morphotypes and genomes which differ radically from those of the known viruses of bacteria and eukaryotes (reviewed in references 23, 28, 30, and 31). Electron microscopy observations suggest that linear viruses dominate in high-temperature environments (12, 33, 35, 42). Those which have been isolated and characterized to date infect members of the archaeal genera Sulfolobus, Acidianus, and Thermoproteus. All of these viruses have been assigned to one of two new families, the nonenveloped Rudiviridae (29) and the enveloped Lipothrixviridae, on the basis of their unique combination of linear morphotypes, dsDNA genomes, and genome contents (28). The first viruses to be assigned to the Lipothrixviridae were three Thermoproteus tenax viruses, namely, T. tenax virus 1 (TTV1), TTV2, and TTV3 (15), of which only TTV1 was studied in detail (20-22, 34). Its linear virion of 40 by 400 nm was shown to be surrounded by an 8 (±1 nm)-nm-thick envelope containing tetraether glycerolipids and proteins in a molar ratio of 1:1, with an inner core of linear dsDNA in complex with equimolar amounts of two highly basic proteins (34). Subsequently, three other filamentous viruses were assigned to this family, including Sulfolobus islandicus filamentous virus (SIFV) (1), Acidianus filamentous virus 1 (AFV1) (5), and AFV2 (13). Their enveloped virions range in length from about 900 nm (AFV1) to 2 μm (SIFV), with diameters of about 24 nm. However, their terminal structures differ: whereas six thin tail fibers protrude from each end of SIFV (1), AFV1 carries claw-like terminal structures (5), while AFV2 exhibits bottlebrush structures at the termini (13). In addition to these morphological differences, these viruses reveal minimal genetic similarities, which provided a basis for subdividing the Lipothrixviridae into the genera Alpha (TTV1)-, Beta (SIFV)-, Gamma (AFV1)-, and Deltalipothrixvirus (AFV2) (28). The virus AFV2 was one of four viruses isolated and characterized from an enrichment culture established from a sample from the hot, acidic springs of Pozzuoli in the Naples region of Italy (12). The other three viruses were Acidianus rod-shaped virus (ARV1) (39), Acidianus two-tailed virus (14, 32), and Acidianus bottle-shaped virus (12). In addition to these viruses, filamentous particles of a putative virus(es) of about 2 μm long were observed in the enrichment culture and later were shown to replicate in a few autochthonous Acidianus strains (12). Here we demonstrate that these viruses constitute a heterogeneous mixture of four closely related species from the genus Betalipothrixvirus of the family Lipothrixviridae, which we named AFV3, AFV6, AFV7, and AFV8. The structure of one of them, AFV3, was examined in detail, and a comparative analysis of the four sequenced genomes together with that of the betalipothrixvirus SIFV (1) is presented. MATERIALS AND METHODS Enrichment culture, isolation of virus hosts, and virus purification. An enrichment culture was established for a sample isolated from a hot, acidic spring in Pozzuoli, Italy, as described previously (12). Acidianus sp. strain Acii25 and “Acidianus convivator,” which were established as hosts for the 2-μm-long filamentous viruses (12), were colony purified from this culture. The virus AFV3 was isolated from a culture of Acidianus sp. strain Acii25, while AFV6, AFV7, and AFV8 were isolated from a culture of “A. convivator” that had been infected with the virus mixture, as described earlier (12). Cells were removed from the growth cultures by low-speed centrifugation (4,500 rpm; Beckman JA10 rotor), and virus particles were recovered by precipitation with polyethylene glycol 6000 in the presence of 1 M NaCl and purified by centrifugation in a CsCl buoyant density gradient (0.45 g/ml) (48,000 rpm for 40 h in a Beckman SW50 rotor). Fractions were collected with a syringe, dialyzed against 20 mM Tris-acetate, pH 6, and analyzed by electron microscopy. Protein and lipid contents. Proteins were separated in 4 to 12% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gradient gels and stained with PageBlue (Fermentas). Protein bands were analyzed by peptide mass fingerprinting with matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time-of-flight mass spectrometry on a Voyager DE-STR instrument (Applied Biosystems, Framingham, MA), as described earlier (32). Transmission electron microscopy. Samples were deposited on carbon-coated copper grids and negatively stained with 3% uranyl acetate, pH 4.5. They were examined in a JEM-2100F (JEOL) electron microscope operated at 200 kV or a CM12 (FEI) electron microscope operated at 120 kV, with magnifications of ×3,000 to ×40,000. Images were either digitally recorded using a slow-scan charge-coupled device camera connected to a PC using TVIPS software (TVIPS GmbH, Gauting, Germany) or recorded with a low electron dose (10 electrons per Å2) on Kodak SO163 micrographs. For image processing, electron micrographs were digitized on a Nikon Coolscan 8000 microdensitometer, using a scanning step and an aperture size of 15.9 μm, corresponding to a pixel size of 3.97 by 3.97 Å2. Image processing was performed with SPIDER software (9), and a total of 629 square sections of AFV tubular structures were boxed and aligned using the reference-free iterative alignment (25). A total two-dimensional (2D) average map was computed to reveal the global shape of the tubular structure. Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM). Sample solutions were deposited on 400-mesh copper grids coated with thin holey carbon films. After blotting of excess solution with filter paper, grids were rapidly frozen by being plunged into liquid ethane (8) and were inserted into the microscope by use of a nitrogen-cooled side-entry Gatan 626 cryoholder. Observations were carried out at −180°C in a JEM-2100F (JEOL) electron microscope, using an acceleration voltage of 200 kV and a magnification of ×40,000. Images were recorded under low-electron-dose conditions (10 electrons per Å2) on Kodak SO163 micrographs, which were developed for 12 min in pure D19 developer at room temperature. For image processing, selected electron micrographs were digitized using a scanning step and an aperture size of 7.9 μm, corresponding to a pixel size of 1.98 by 1.98 Å2. A total of 13,541 square portions of AFV structures were boxed, centered, and aligned. To explore the structure of the virus, a total 2D average map was computed using multivariate statistical analysis (4, 38, 40). DNA sequencing and sequence analysis. DNAs were prepared from purified AFV3 and from the purified mixture of AFV6, AFV7, and AFV8. After disruption by treatment with 1% SDS for 5 h at room temperature, the virions were extracted twice with phenol and twice with phenol-chloroform, and viral DNA was precipitated by adding 0.1 volume of 3 M sodium acetate, pH 5.3, and 0.8 volume of isopropanol. The DNA pellet was washed with 70% ethanol, air dried, and resuspended in an appropriate volume of TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8, 1 mM EDTA). A shotgun library was prepared by sonicating DNA to produce fragments of 2 to 3 kb and then cloning these into the SmaI site of the pUC18 vector. DNA clones were isolated using a model 8000 Biobot (Qiagen, Westburg, Germany) and sequenced in MegaBACE 1000 sequencers (Amersham Biotech, Amersham, United Kingdom). Given the small total amounts of genomic DNA that were available (<1 μg purified DNA per virus), the ends were sequenced by primer walking on DNA amplified with a GenomiPhi kit (Amersham Biotech). The viral sequence was assembled using Sequencher 3.1 and annotated using MUTAGEN (7). Genome analyses were performed using ARTEMIS (http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Software/Artemis/). Gene sequence searches were made in GenBank/EMBL (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST) and in the Sulfolobus Database (http://www.Sulfolobus.org/cbin/mutagen.pl). Motifs were identified using the PFAM database (http://pfam.janelia.org). RESULTS Host range and identification of filamentous viruses. Filamentous particles of 2 μm long were observed in an enrichment culture of an environmental sample from Pozzuoli, Naples, Italy, and owing to similarities in shape and size, we originally inferred that they represented virions of a single viral species (12). The presumed species was purified and was shown to infect and replicate in two colony-purified autochthonous strains, namely, “A. convivator” and Acidianus sp. strain Acii25 (12). However, detailed examination by electron microscopy revealed that whereas virions replicated by Acidianus sp. strain Acii25 were homogenous in their terminal structures, those replicated by “A. convivator” revealed two types of structures at their termini (Fig. (Fig.1).1
Replication of the four viruses did not cause detectable lysis of the host cells or any decrease in cell density. A plaque assay was not used because the host strains did not grow as a lawn on solid medium. AFV3 virion structure. Transmission electron microscopy following negative staining demonstrated that the AFV3 virion is a flexible filament of 2 ± 0.1 μm long and 24 ± 1 nm wide (Fig. (Fig.2A).2A
Details of the envelope structure were visualized by imaging the virus at 200 kV. After digitizing images of the negatively stained virions, 629 square sections of AFV3 tubes were boxed in 128- by 128-pixel individual images and aligned. The 2D average map (Fig. (Fig.3a)3a
Cryo-EM images were also digitized, and 13,541 square sections of AFV filaments were boxed in 180- by 180-pixel individual images, centered, and aligned using a reference-free alignment (25). The global 2D average (Fig. (Fig.3b)3b A multivariate statistical analysis was carried out on the 13,541 aligned images. After automatic classification, different class averages were computed, and they showed variations in the inner features and in the arrangement of ovoid masses (Fig. (Fig.4).4
In order to verify the presence of lipids in the outer layer of the virion cylinder, which was strongly suggested by its dispersion in Triton X-100 (Fig. (Fig.2B),2B Genome maps. DNAs were isolated from purified AFV3 and from the mixture of filamentous viruses replicating in “A. convivator.” For both DNA preparations, shotgun clone libraries with 2- to 4-kbp inserts were constructed in pUC18 and sequenced to about fivefold genome coverage (see Materials and Methods). Whereas the AFV3 DNA library yielded a single genome sequence, that of the virus mixture produced three related genomes corresponding to three viruses, named AFV6, AFV7, and AFV8. At the nucleotide level, average sequence identities were about 80%, such that each genome could be assembled unambiguously. Any local sequence uncertainties were resolved by sequencing PCR fragments amplified from appropriate genomic regions. The terminal regions of linear genomes are absent from clone libraries (13), and they were sequenced by successive primer walking on either viral or amplified viral DNA. The extreme terminal sequences were not obtained even using the latter procedure. The total sequences obtained from the viral genomes were 40,449 bp (AFV3), 39,577 bp (AFV6), 36,895 bp (AFV7), and 38,179 bp (AFV8). Genome maps were aligned for each virus (Fig. (Fig.5),5
Each AFV genome carries a long inverted terminal repeat (ITR), and each terminal region exhibits the motif TGTCATT, repeated two or three times with a constant spacing of 65 bp and ending at a conserved 62-bp sequence near the terminus. This differs from the ITR of SIFV, where each end carries six or seven perfect direct repeats of 27 bp (26). Although complete terminal sequences were not obtained, analysis of an EcoRI restriction digest of AFV3 DNA indicated that less than 100 bp of sequence was lacking from each end (data not shown). We infer that the failure to obtain these terminal sequences reflects an unusual structure involving chemical modifications or strong intermolecular interactions. Structural proteins and predicted protein functions. Proteins extracted from the AFV3 preparation were resolved electrophoretically into two major components (Fig. (Fig.6),6
Gene products that could be assigned putative functions are listed in Table 1. Most are conserved in each of the four viruses, and several are conserved in SIFV. Apart from the two major structural proteins, they include transcriptional regulators, glycosyltransferases, helicases, a nuclease, a methyltransferase, and a protein phosphatase. Both helicase homologs, ORF564 and ORF593, exhibit catalytic centers of the ReqQ type, which have been implicated in DNA replication and DNA repair. Moreover, ORF593 shows significant sequence similarity to the experimentally characterized Holliday junction branch migration helicase of Pyrococcus furiosus (PF0677) and its homologs in Sulfolobus (10). ORF593 also lies in a conserved operon together with ORF203, the predicted nuclease gene (see Fig. Fig.8),8
Gene regulation and overlapping genes. The availability of five related genomes sharing many homologous genes, several of which are conserved in order, enabled us to define conserved transcriptional and translational signals with high confidence. For example, genes for the structural proteins of AFV3 (ORF166 and ORF204) lie in a highly conserved operon (Fig. (Fig.7).7
Several pairs of ORFs show unusual overlaps of up to 23 bp which are conserved in the five genomes. Three of the overlaps occur in two adjacent operons, one of which encodes the putative nuclease and helicase (ORF203 and ORF593) mentioned above (Fig. (Fig.8A).8A Intergenomic recombination event. The gene content and order in the left halves of the four AFV genomes are highly conserved, apart from a variable section between positions 7 and 10 kb of each genome, and some of this conservation extends to the SIFV genome (Fig. (Fig.5).5
Examination of the sequences at the boundaries of the AFV2-like region revealed two putative recombination sites in the AFV7 genome (Fig. (Fig.9A).9A Genome stability and genomic variants. The occurrence of 12-bp insertions/deletions, or multiples thereof, has been reported for the rudiviruses Sulfolobus islandicus rod-shaped virus 1 (SIRV1), SIRV2, and ARV1 (6, 26, 27, 39). In shotgun libraries of SIRV1 variants, these differences were sometimes detected in overlapping clones, and it was considered that they might constitute genetic elements mobilized by archaeal intron splicing (27). Most of the changes were observed in ORFs, where they alter the gene size without disrupting the reading frame. Although no such 12-bp differences were detected in clone libraries of the four AFVs, a comparative genome analysis revealed several examples of 12-bp differences in otherwise conserved sequence regions. Single 12-bp differences were detected in homologs (AFV3 numbers) of ORF61a, ORF118, ORF185, ORF338, and ORF593, and three occur within ORF1349 (Fig. (Fig.5).5
Occurrence of viral sequences in host chromosomal repeat clusters. All sequenced crenarchaeal chromosomes carry multiple clusters of repeat sequences (~24 bp) interspaced with unique sequences of ~39 to 42 bp, which are designated SRSR or CRISPR (17). The spacers sometimes show good sequence matches with extrachromosomal elements which propagate in the same genus (19). It has been suggested (17, 18, 19) and was recently confirmed (3) that these DNA fragments were transferred, directly or indirectly, from the virus and incorporated into the clusters, thereby providing a defense against subsequent infection by the same or a related virus. Analysis of the genomes of AFV3, AFV6, AFV7, and AFV8 demonstrated that sequences corresponding to three genes are present in CRISPR sequences of Sulfolobus solfataricus P2 (36). They match ORF593, ORF267a, and ORF96*/ORF80 of AFV3 (shown in bold in Fig. Fig.5)5 DISCUSSION Virion structural model. The structures of enveloped, linear dsDNA viruses (family Lipothrixviridae) are poorly understood, and little is known about the organization of the outer layer of the virions. For AFV3, we demonstrated that the outer surface of the virion constitutes a helix with a diameter of 21 nm and a pitch of ~3 nm by negative staining and cryo-EM. Small globular subunits are arranged regularly at an angle of 60° from the main cylindrical axis, and the outer shell is slightly rippled, with a periodic structure. Another underlying set of features emerged from the 2D maps, corresponding to ovoid masses in the lumen of the tubular walls. Analysis of the random granular properties of all the 2D maps indicated that the building units of the outer wall and the ovoid masses in the virion are independent. Therefore, the reference-free alignment focused on the arrangement of the internal ovoid masses and did not address the helical granular periodicity on the outer surface. This explains the fuzzy images obtained on all 2D maps from cryo-EM and could indicate that there is little or no coordination between outer and inner repetitive structures. In order to explain some of the features observed in the class averages, a model of the virus (Fig. 4g to i The estimated thickness of the outer layer of the AFV3 virion of 3.1 nm measured on the 2D average map corresponds closely with estimates for virions of other lipothrixviruses, namely, SIFV, AFV1, and AFV2, based on observed particle widths before and after removal of the outer layer (1, 5, 13). The value is less than the minimal observed widths of cellular or viral membranes (41) and raises the issue of the chemical composition of the outer layer. The fact that Triton X-100 can remove the outer envelope from the AFV3 virion (Fig. (Fig.2C)2C The three tail fibers at each end of the AFV3 virion (Fig. (Fig.2D)2D Genomic properties. Genomic characteristics support the assignment of the four closely related viruses AFV3, AFV6, AFV7, and AFV8, from the hot acidic springs of Pozzuoli, Italy, to the genus Betalipothrixvirus, together with SIFV (Fig. (Fig.5).5 The genomes exhibit some highly conserved operons which are likely to carry genes with related functions. Some of these functions were predicted, including an operon(s) carrying the genes for two important structural proteins (Fig. (Fig.7).7
Long ITRs occur in each betalipothrixviral and rudiviral genome, but they have not been observed to date for members of the other lipothrixviral genera (Table 2). For TTV1 (21, 22) and AFV2 (13), this could reflect that an insufficient terminal sequence was obtained, but AFV1 does not carry long ITRs, and its terminal genomic regions are characterized by multiple direct repeats, reminiscent of telomeres, which end in an 11-bp G+C ITR (5). We still lack insight into the sequences at the extreme termini of all lipothrixviral genomes, except that of AFV1. In contrast to the rod-shaped rudiviruses, where the two DNA strands are linked 5′-3′ at the termini, generating small terminal loops (6, 26), the genomic termini of SIFV were found to be inaccessible to single- and double-strand-specific exonucleases, probably reflecting an unidentified modification (1). ORF235, which, exceptionally, is well conserved in all genomes of the three lipothrixviral genera, was aligned and a dendrogram constructed (Fig. (Fig.11).11
Concluding remarks. We are still at an early stage in understanding the molecular biology of the crenarchaeal viruses. Sequence database searches yielded only limited insights into gene functions for these viruses, and although there are indications of some proteins being involved in DNA folding and replication and the ubiquitous glycosyltransferases are probably important for modulating virus-host interactions, we still have little knowledge of the details of the essential viral molecular processes and host interactions. Nevertheless, recent determinations of virion structures and genome sequences for members of several different crenarchaeal viral families, including those presented here, provide a strong stimulation for future structural and functional studies. Acknowledgments We thank Walter Gratzer for illuminating discussions concerning lipid membrane properties. We thank Eric Larquet for his help with microscopy. This work was supported by grant NT05-2_41674 from the Agence Nationale de Recherche, France (ANR Blanche), grant PR 663/2-1 from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, and grants from the Danish Natural Science Research Council for an Archaea Centre and from the Danish Grundforskningsfond for a Centre of Comparative Genomics and for the EU Sulfolobus Network (QLK3-2000-00649). T.B. was supported by a Dr. Roux postdoctoral fellowship from the Institut Pasteur. We acknowledge support from the European Commission for NoE 3D-EM (contract LSHG-CT-2004-502828) and help from the Region Ile-de-France for convention SESAME 2000 E 1435, supporting the JEOL 2100F electron microscope installed at the IMPMC (UMR 7590 CNRS-UPMC). Footnotes Published ahead of print on 17 October 2007.REFERENCES 1. Arnold, H. P., W. Zillig, U. Ziese, I. Holz, M. Crosby, T. Utterback, J. F. Weidmann, J. Kristjansson, H. P. Klenk, K. E. Nelson, and C. M. Fraser. 2000. 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