Comparative analysis of the presence of bacteriophages was carried out for the water column of a permanently ice-covered, extremely oligotrophic Lake Untersee (East Antarctica) and the ancient ice wedge of the Mamontova Gora outcrop (Aldan River, Central Yakutia). Microscopy revealed bacteriophages in the Mamontova Gora ice samples and in the lysates of the pure cultures of phage-sensitive bacteria isolated from the same samples. Bacteriophages isolated from these cultures were filamentous and interacted with bacteria as moderate (lysogenic) phages. A similar filamentous bacteriophage was isolated from the Lake Untersee water column. The highest morphological diversity of bacteriophages was revealed by microscopy in the oxic Lake Untersee water column in the chemocline zone (70-76 m) and in the sulfide layer (85 m). Detection of similar filamentous bacteriophages in a relic ice sample and in the samples from Antarctic Lake Untersee indicate wide occurrence of bacteriophages and lysogeny in microbial communities of low-temperature ecosystems.
Virions of bean mild mosaic virus (BMMV) are built of 180 subunits of a single protein species of MW 40 × 103 [coat protein CP], packed into a T = 3 surface lattice. The capsomers on the five-fold symmetry axes protrude 2–3 nm from the particle surface. The virions encapsidate genome-size [approximately 4,200 nucleotides (nt)] as well as some heterogeneous RNAs of subgenomic size approximately 1,000–2,000 nt. In cell-free systems from Krebs-2 ascites cell extracts and rabbit reticulocyte lysates, genome-size RNA directed the synthesis predominantly of two polypeptides of MW 27 × 103 and 79 × 103 while the third major BMMV-specific polypeptide (MW 40 × 103, putative CP) seemed to be encoded by a shorter messenger RNA. The ‘cap’ analogue, m7GDP, partially inhibited BMMV RNA in vitro translation, suggesting that at least part of the BMMV-specific RNAs are capped. Oligo (dT)-cellulose column chromatography data suggested that poly(A)-tracts are absent from the BMMV genome. The data obtained confirm the previous classification of BMMV within the carmovirus group.
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