Hybrids of RNA viruses and viroid-like elements replicate in fungi

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date Issued

Date Online

2023-05-05

Language

en

Review Status

Peer Review

Access Rights

Open Access Open Access

Usage Rights

CC-BY-4.0

Share

Citation

Forgia, M., Navarro, B., Daghino, S., Cervera, A., Gisel, A., Perotto, S., ... & de la Peña, M. (2023). Hybrids of RNA viruses and viroid-like elements replicate in fungi. Nature Communications, 14: 2591, 1-11.

Permanent link to cite or share this item

External link to download this item

Abstract/Description

Earth’s lifemay have originated as self-replicating RNA, and it has been argued that RNA viruses and viroid-like elements are remnants of such pre-cellular RNA world. RNA viruses are defined by linear RNA genomes encoding an RNAdependent RNA polymerase (RdRp), whereas viroid-like elements consist of small, single-stranded, circular RNA genomes that, in some cases, encode paired self-cleaving ribozymes. Here we show that the number of candidate viroid-like elements occurring in geographically and ecologically diverse niches is much higher than previously thought. We report that, amongst these circular genomes, fungal ambiviruses are viroid-like elements that undergo rolling circle replication and encode their own viral RdRp. Thus, ambiviruses are distinct infectious RNAs showing hybrid features of viroid-like RNAs and viruses. We also detected similar circular RNAs, containing active ribozymes and encoding RdRps, related to mitochondrial-like fungal viruses, highlighting fungi as an evolutionary hub for RNA viruses and viroid-like elements. Our findings point to a deep co-evolutionary history between RNA viruses and subviral elements and offer new perspectives in the origin and evolution of primordial infectious agents, and RNA life.

Contributes to SDGs

SDG 2 - Zero hunger
AGROVOC Keywords
Countries