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Cells and giant viruses: a win-win co-evolution

Description du projet

Trajectoire évolutive des girus dans le monde cellulaire

Le mimivirus (famille des Mimiviridae) est un girus icosaédrique visible en microscopie optique, qui utilise l’amibe comme hôte naturel. La découverte de ce virus et d’autres girus a soulevé des questions sur leur origine et leur évolution. Le projet VIREVOL, financé par l’UE, étudiera la coévolution de ces virus et de leurs hôtes amibiens, en se concentrant sur les caractéristiques spécifiques des virions. L’hypothèse de l’étude est qu’une transition entre les virions icosaédriques rigides et les particules plus plastiques en forme d’amphore s’est produite via le détournement de la voie de synthèse de la cellulose de l’hôte par l’ancêtre de ces virus. La recherche se concentrera également sur la structure en forme de bâtonnet et l’organisation de leur génome, afin de découvrir des liens évolutifs avec les systèmes d’empaquetage du génome dans le monde cellulaire.

Objectif

The discovery of Mimivirus, the first icosahedral virus visible by light microscopy, was followed by the characterization of many other relatives. Its aquatic relative Megavirus chilensis, has a 1.2 Mb genome and encodes more than 1000 proteins, 2/3 unique to the Mimiviridae. Their infectious cycle is cytoplasmic. During the last 10 years, my laboratory discovered three other giant virus families: -the pandoraviridae, with their unique amphora-shaped 1µm long virion morphologies, genome sizes reaching 3Mb and encoding thousands of proteins, most of which without homologues in the cellular or the viral world – the mollivirus, which was isolated from a 30,000 years old Siberian permafrost sample, presents common features with the pandoraviruses. They share 60 unique genes and the roughly spherical (0.6µm) mollivirions present an external tegument resembling the pandoravirions. Both viruses have an early nuclear phase – the pithovirus, despite its amphora-shaped virions, has a fully cytoplasmic cycle. Our work raised questions on the origin of these intriguing viral families and their position in the tree of life. My project is unique as it will address the coevolution of these viruses and their amoebal hosts by focusing on specific features of the virions in two overall aims. 1) Promising preliminary results led us to hypothesize that a progressive transition from the rigid icosahedral virions to the more plastic amphora-shaped particles was made possible through hijacking of the host cellulose synthesis pathway by the ancestor of pandoraviruses. 2) The icosahedral mimivirus package its genome in a complex rod-shaped structure. My team will investigate this structure to unveil possible evolutionary links with the genome packaging systems in the cellular world. We will characterize the machinery responsible for such organization. These two high-risk/high-gain aims will continue to revisit the concept of virus and their evolutionary trajectory in the living world.

Régime de financement

ERC-ADG - Advanced Grant

Institution d’accueil

CENTRE NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE SCIENTIFIQUE CNRS
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 2 246 453,00
Adresse
RUE MICHEL ANGE 3
75794 Paris
France

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Région
Ile-de-France Ile-de-France Paris
Type d’activité
Research Organisations
Liens
Coût total
€ 2 246 453,00

Bénéficiaires (1)