Project description:Virophages are small dsDNA viruses dependent on a nucleocytoplasmic large-DNA virus infection of a cellular host for replication. Putative virophages infecting algal hosts are classified together with Polinton-like viruses, transposable elements widely found in algal genomes, yet the lack of isolated strains raises questions about their existence as independent entities. We isolated and characterized a virophage (PgVV-14T) co-infecting Phaeocystis globosa with the Phaeocystis globosa virus-14T (PgV-14T).
Project description:purpose:The large-scale reproduction of Phaeocystis globosa has caused serious damage to the marine ecosystem in the coastal waters of China. The outbreak of algae blooms depends on the competitive advantage of their heteromorphic life history: colonial formation is beneficial to resist zooplankton predation, and the single isolated cells can absorb nutrients rapidly. methods:For RNA exaction, the biomass was resuspended in 2 mL RNA extraction buffer (1:1 mix of aqua-phenol and buffer L [0.5% SDS, 10 mM EDTA, 0.2 M sodium acetate (pH 5), and 1:100 β-mercaptoethanol)] and then incubated with DNase I (Takara, Japan) for 30 min at 37 °C to remove genomic DNA. RNA quality analysis, library construction, sequencing, data filtering and mapping were performed by the Novogene Bioinformatics Technology Co., Ltd. (Beijing, China). results:Three biological replicates from GX-C and ST-C were ensured statistical comparability and reliability of data. Raw data ranged from 25, 608,632 to 35,516,726 reads per sample. After producing more than 24 million clean reads, removing low-quality sequences and adapter sequences. Additionally, 4386 genes were differentially expressed at statistically significant levels, which included 2268 up-regulated genes and 2118 down-regulated genes. Genes with significant differential expression were involved in several pathways, including starch and sucrose, phagosome, inositol phosphate metabolism, fatty acid degradation. conclusions: In summary, we can find that colonial cells have stronger carbon fixation capacity. It is not used to synthesize fatty acids as reserves of energy, but to secrete EPS. The reduction of fatty acid makes P. globosa become “low-quality food” and the formation of colony from EPS reduces the chance of being ingestion by zooplankton.