2007
DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.82396-0
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Genome organization of the Chelonus inanitus polydnavirus: excision sites, spacers and abundance of proviral and excised segments

Abstract: Polydnaviruses are only found in symbiotic association with parasitic wasps within the families Ichneumonidae and Braconidae (ichnoviruses and bracoviruses). They have a segmented genome consisting of circular double-stranded DNA. In the proviral linear form they are integrated in the wasp's genome; in two bracoviruses, segments were found to be clustered. Proviral segments have direct terminal repeats. Segment excision has been proposed to occur through juxtaposition of these repeats by formation of a loop an… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…Like all Cheloninae, C. inanitus oviposits into the eggs of lepidopteran hosts, whereas the other BV-associated wasps inject their eggs inside immune competent larvae (figure 1) [14]. Parasitism strategies involving the oviposition into host eggs versus larvae, exposing the wasp larvae to different physiological contexts, could explain the different panel of virulence proteins found in chelonines [83,84] compared with other wasps.…”
Section: Bracoviruses and Wasp Adaptationmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Like all Cheloninae, C. inanitus oviposits into the eggs of lepidopteran hosts, whereas the other BV-associated wasps inject their eggs inside immune competent larvae (figure 1) [14]. Parasitism strategies involving the oviposition into host eggs versus larvae, exposing the wasp larvae to different physiological contexts, could explain the different panel of virulence proteins found in chelonines [83,84] compared with other wasps.…”
Section: Bracoviruses and Wasp Adaptationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specific genes or gene families could reflect how physiological interactions with different hosts have modelled these genomes. For example, despite originating from the same ancestral nudivirus, no common virulence genes have been identified to date between CiBV and other BV genomes [83]. Like all Cheloninae, C. inanitus oviposits into the eggs of lepidopteran hosts, whereas the other BV-associated wasps inject their eggs inside immune competent larvae (figure 1) [14].…”
Section: Bracoviruses and Wasp Adaptationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All proviral segments from all BVs analysed to date are terminated by direct repeats at both extremities, termed DRJs [12,13,16,29,30,32]. Bracovirus circles contain a unique sequence (circle junction) produced from a recombination event between these DRJs [12,33].…”
Section: (C) Proviral Segment Extremities Are Conservedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous studies using molecular approaches [12,13] and in situ hybridization on wasp chromosomes [14] showed that the proviral segments analysed were clustered together. This led to the hypothesis that all proviral segments might be organized in the wasp genome in tandem arrays constituting a macrolocus [14,15].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The conserved PDV excision site sequence obtained from previous related PDVs (8,44) was used to locate sites in different CpBV segments (NCBI accession number): S2 (DQ075354), S3 (DQ075355), S4 (DQ075356), S5 (DQ075357), S8 (DQ0753 58), S9 (DQ075359), S10 (EF067319), S11 (DQ075360), S14 (EF067320), S16 (EF067321), S21 (EF067322), S22 (EF067323), S27 (DQ067324), S28 (AY651829), S30 (AY651828), S33 (AY 651830), S35 (EF067325), S36 (EF067326), S37 (EF067327), S38 (EF067328), S41 (EF067329), S48 (EF067330), S50 (EF06 7331), and S51 (EF067332). Multiple alignment of these terminal CpBV repeats was performed using the DNAstar program (Version 5.02, DNAstar Inc., Madison, WI, USA).…”
Section: Sequence Analysis Of Cpbv Segment Excision Sitementioning
confidence: 99%