Tese
Desvendando características biológicas e moleculares dos vírus gigantes: predição e análise de motivos promotores em Marseillevírus, Faustovírus e Kaumoebavírus e caracterização do efeito citopático do Tupanvírus em Acanthamoeba castellanii.
Fecha
2018-08-27Autor
Graziele Pereira Oliveira
Institución
Resumen
The discovery of giant viruses led to the breakdown of paradigms in virology field due virus
particle size and genomic and structural complexity. In the last decade, the search for new
giant viruses intensified leading to the discovery of marseillevirus, faustovirus,
kaumoebavirus and tupanvirus. In order to elucidate the biological and molecular
informations of these viruses that remain unclear, this work aimed to predict and analyze the
promoter motifs in Marseilleviridae family viruses, in faustovirus and kaumoebavirus, further
to characterize the cytopathic effect of tupanvirus in Acanthamoeba castellanii. The analysis
of promoter motifs led to the first characterization of an octamer (AAATATTT) that can act
as a promoter in the Marseilleviridae family. The distribution and localization of the motif
relative to the start codon followed a pattern similar to that demonstrated for other promoters
described among NCLDV members. In addition, the biological relevance of the predicted
octamer was demonstrated and the motifs repetitions in intergenic regions of the
marseillevirus genome was associated with the high ability of the marseillevirus to acquire
genes by lateral gene transfer contributing to explain their mosaicism and genomic plasticity.
The search for promoter motifs in faustovirus and kaumoebavirus revealed that these viruses
share in abundance the same promoter sequences (TATTT and TATATA), as previously
described in viruses of the Asfarviridae family. It has been demonstrated that the predicted
motifs are present in more than 65% of the genes shared among faustovirus, kaumoebavirus
and asfarvirus, reinforcing the phylogenetic relationship between these viruses. In addition to
the regulation of transcriptional processes, an important challenge for viruses in nature is the
search for host cells. In this context, we performed a detailed characterization of the
cytopathic effect of tupanvirus in the culture of Acanthamoeba castellanii, which led to the
description of a new type of virus-host interaction involving the tupanvirus. Tupanvirus
infection has been shown to be capable of inducing the expression of genes encoding a viral
and cellular mannose binding protein (MBP), suggesting the importance of the MBP in
tupanvirus multiplication cycle. Interestingly the presence of mannose led not only to
suppression of the increase in transcripts level of the viral and cellular MBP genes, but also
led to the inhibition of amoebal-bunches formation at a concentration dependent, suggesting
that the bunches formation correlates with the expression of the viral and cellular MBP genes.
Finally, we demonstrate that the amoebal-bunches formed during multiplication of
tupanviruses are able to interact with uninfected cells contributing to viral spread.