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Convergent evolution of viral-like Borg archaeal extrachromosomal elements and giant eukaryotic viruses

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  • Jillian F. Banfield

    (Monash University, Biomedicine Discovery Institute
    Berkeley, Innovative Genomics Institute, UC Berkeley
    Berkeley, Earth and Planetary Science, UC Berkeley
    Berkeley, Environmental Science, Policy and Management, UC Berkeley)

  • Luis E. Valentin-Alvarado

    (Monash University, Biomedicine Discovery Institute
    Berkeley, Innovative Genomics Institute, UC Berkeley
    Berkeley, Plant and Microbial Biology, UC Berkeley)

  • Ling-Dong Shi

    (Berkeley, Innovative Genomics Institute, UC Berkeley)

  • Colin Michael Robinson

    (Berkeley, Plant and Microbial Biology, UC Berkeley)

  • Rebecca S. Bamert

    (Monash University, Biomedicine Discovery Institute)

  • Fasseli Coulibaly

    (Berkeley, Innovative Genomics Institute, UC Berkeley)

  • Zachary K. Barth

    (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University)

  • Frank O. Aylward

    (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University)

  • Marie C. Schoelmerich

    (Berkeley, Innovative Genomics Institute, UC Berkeley
    ETH Zurich, Department of Environmental Systems Sciences)

  • Shufei Lei

    (Berkeley, Innovative Genomics Institute, UC Berkeley)

  • Rohan Sachdeva

    (Berkeley, Innovative Genomics Institute, UC Berkeley)

  • Gavin J. Knott

    (Monash University, Biomedicine Discovery Institute)

Abstract

Borgs are huge extrachromosomal elements of anaerobic methane-oxidizing archaea. They exist in exceedingly complex microbiomes, lack cultivated hosts and have few protein functional annotations, precluding their classification as plasmids, viruses or other. Here, we use in silico structure prediction methods to investigate potential roles for ~10,000 Borg proteins. Prioritizing analysis of multicopy genes that could signal importance for Borg lifestyles, we uncover highly represented de-ubiquitination-like Zn-metalloproteases that may counter host targeting of Borg proteins for proteolysis. Also prevalent are clusters of multicopy genes for production of diverse glycoconjugates that could contribute to decoration of the host cell surface, or of putative capsid proteins that we predict multimerize into pentagonal and hexagonal arrays. Features including megabase-scale linear genomes with inverted terminal repeats, genomic repertoires for energy metabolism, central carbon compound transformations and translation, and pervasive direct repeat regions are shared with giant viruses of eukaryotes, although analyses suggest that these parallels arose via convergent evolution. If Borgs are giant archaeal viruses they would fill the gap in the tri(um)virate of giant viruses of all three domains of life.

Suggested Citation

  • Jillian F. Banfield & Luis E. Valentin-Alvarado & Ling-Dong Shi & Colin Michael Robinson & Rebecca S. Bamert & Fasseli Coulibaly & Zachary K. Barth & Frank O. Aylward & Marie C. Schoelmerich & Shufei , 2025. "Convergent evolution of viral-like Borg archaeal extrachromosomal elements and giant eukaryotic viruses," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-14, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-65646-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-65646-7
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