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Research Article

Paleozoic origin of insect large dsDNA viruses

Julien Thézé, Annie Bézier, Georges Periquet, Jean-Michel Drezen, and Elisabeth A. Herniou
  1. Institut de Recherche sur la Biologie de l'Insecte, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Unité Mixte de Recherche (UMR) 6035, Université François Rabelais, 37200 Tours, France

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PNAS first published September 12, 2011; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1105580108
Julien Thézé
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Annie Bézier
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Georges Periquet
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Jean-Michel Drezen
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Elisabeth A. Herniou
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  • For correspondence: elisabeth.herniou@univ-tours.fr
  1. Edited by Nancy A. Moran, Yale University, West Haven, CT, and approved August 10, 2011 (received for review April 8, 2011)

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Abstract

To understand how extant viruses interact with their hosts, we need a historical framework of their evolutionary association. Akin to retrovirus or hepadnavirus viral fossils present in eukaryotic genomes, bracoviruses are integrated in braconid wasp genomes and are transmitted by Mendelian inheritance. However, unlike viral genomic fossils, they have retained functional machineries homologous to those of large dsDNA viruses pathogenic to arthropods. Using a phylogenomic approach, we resolved the relationships between bracoviruses and their closest free relatives: baculoviruses and nudiviruses. The phylogeny showed that bracoviruses are nested within the nudivirus clade. Bracoviruses establish a bridge between the virus and animal worlds. Their inclusion in a virus phylogeny allowed us to relate free viruses to fossils. The ages of the wasps were used to calibrate the virus phylogeny. Bayesian analyses revealed that insect dsDNA viruses first evolved at ∼310 Mya in the Paleozoic Era during the Carboniferous Period with the first insects. Furthermore the virus diversification time frame during the Mesozoic Era appears linked to the diversification of insect orders; baculoviruses that infect larvae evolved at the same period as holometabolous insects. These results imply ancient coevolution by resource tracking between several insect dsDNA virus families and their hosts, dating back to 310 Mya.

  • Baculoviridae
  • Polydnaviridae
  • virus age estimate
  • time to most recent common ancestor
  • paleovirology

Footnotes

  • ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: elisabeth.herniou{at}univ-tours.fr.
  • Author contributions: J.-M.D. and E.A.H. designed research; J.T. and A.B. performed research; J.T., A.B., G.P., and E.A.H. analyzed data; and J.T., G.P., J.-M.D., and E.A.H. wrote the paper.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.

  • This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.

  • Data deposition: The sequences reported in this paper have been deposited in EMBL (www.ebi.ac.uk/) (accession nos. FN557481–FN557487).

  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1105580108/-/DCSupplemental.

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Paleozoic origin of insect large dsDNA viruses
Julien Thézé, Annie Bézier, Georges Periquet, Jean-Michel Drezen, Elisabeth A. Herniou
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Sep 2011, 201105580; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1105580108

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Paleozoic origin of insect large dsDNA viruses
Julien Thézé, Annie Bézier, Georges Periquet, Jean-Michel Drezen, Elisabeth A. Herniou
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Sep 2011, 201105580; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1105580108
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