AI Article Synopsis

  • - The text discusses the discovery of a new virus found in bat feces that encodes a core protein and reverse transcriptase but lacks an envelope protein, positioning it in the family of nonenveloped viruses known as nackednaviruses.
  • - A related viral sequence from permafrost suggests that these two viruses have a unique evolutionary lineage, diverging from hepadnaviruses and nackednaviruses around 500 million years ago.
  • - These findings could lead to the identification of a new "proto-nackednavirus" family and support the idea that the ancestors of hepadnaviruses were originally nonenveloped viruses.

Article Abstract

Reverse-transcribing animal DNA viruses include the hepadnaviruses, a well-characterized family of small enveloped viruses that infect vertebrates but also a sister group of nonenveloped viruses more recently discovered in fish and termed the nackednaviruses. Here, we describe the complete sequence of a virus found in the feces of an insectivorous bat, which encodes a core protein and a reverse transcriptase but no envelope protein. A database search identified a viral sequence from a permafrost sample as its closest relative. The two viruses form a cluster that occupies a basal phylogenetic position relative to hepadnaviruses and nackednaviruses, with an estimated divergence time of 500 My. These findings may lead to the definition of a "proto-nackednavirus" family and support the hypothesis that the ancestors of hepadnaviruses were nonenveloped.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11551314PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2415631121DOI Listing

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