Amplification of Uncultured Single-Stranded DNA Viruses from Rice Paddy Soil

Author:

Kim Kyoung-Ho1,Chang Ho-Won1,Nam Young-Do1,Roh Seong Woon1,Kim Min-Soo1,Sung Youlboong2,Jeon Che Ok3,Oh Hee-Mock1,Bae Jin-Woo14

Affiliation:

1. Biological Resource Center, KRIBB, Daejeon 305-806, Korea

2. Environmental Research Department, Research Institute of Industrial Science and Technology, Gwangyang 545-090, Korea

3. Department of Life Science, Chung-Ang University, Seoul 156-756, Korea

4. Environmental Biotechnology National Core Research Center, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju 660-701, Korea

Abstract

ABSTRACT Viruses are known to be the most numerous biological entities in soil; however, little is known about their diversity in this environment. In order to explore the genetic diversity of soil viruses, we isolated viruses by centrifugation and sequential filtration before performing a metagenomic investigation. We adopted multiple-displacement amplification (MDA), an isothermal whole-genome amplification method with φ29 polymerase and random hexamers, to amplify viral DNA and construct clone libraries for metagenome sequencing. By the MDA method, the diversity of both single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) viruses and double-stranded DNA viruses could be investigated at the same time. On the contrary, by eliminating the denaturing step in the MDA reaction, only ssDNA viral diversity could be explored selectively. Irrespective of the denaturing step, more than 60% of the soil metagenome sequences did not show significant hits (E-value criterion, 0.001) with previously reported viral sequences. Those hits that were considered to be significant were also distantly related to known ssDNA viruses (average amino acid similarity, approximately 34%). Phylogenetic analysis showed that replication-related proteins (which were the most frequently detected proteins) related to those of ssDNA viruses obtained from the metagenomic sequences were diverse and novel. Putative circular genome components of ssDNA viruses that are unrelated to known viruses were assembled from the metagenomic sequences. In conclusion, ssDNA viral diversity in soil is more complex than previously thought. Soil is therefore a rich pool of previously unknown ssDNA viruses.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

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