Members of the
Microviridae
comprise two subfamilies. The microviruses (Greek for small), which infect free‐living bacteria, are among the fastest known replicating viruses. Gokushoviruses (Japanese for very small) occupy a unique niche, infecting obligate intracellular bacteria, such as
Chlamydia
and
Bdellovibrio
, or mollicutes, bacteria without a cell wall. All members of the family contain small (4000–6000 bases), circular, single‐stranded
deoxyribonucleic acid
(ssDNA) genomes of positive polarity, which are packaged inside small (∼25 nm diameter) T=1 icosahedral capsids. The other icosahedral, ssDNA virus families:
Parvoviridae
,
Circoviridae
,
Nanoviridae
and
Geminiviridae
; share most of these properties, suggesting a large super family spanning several domains of life. The most well known member of the
Microviridae
, ϕX174, has been extensively used to study the fundamental mechanisms of DNA replication and capsid assembly. The latter is uniquely dependent on two scaffolding proteins, and has become a model system for experimental evolution.
Key Concepts:
Whilst overlapping reading frames increase the amount of genetic information encoded in small genomes, they do not appear to significantly impact the ability of the virus to genetically adapt to selective pressures.
Due to the genome's positive polarity, DNA replication must commence before viral genes can be transcribed.
Microvirus DNA replication occurs in three distinct stages: (1) ssDNA is first converted to a double‐stranded molecule, (2) amplification of the double‐stranded molecule, (3) single‐stranded genomic DNA synthesis and packaging.
Genomic DNA synthesis and packaging are concurrent processes; thus, a genome is not synthesised unless there exists a capsid in which to package it.
Gene expression is controlled by the finely tuned interplay of
cis
‐acting genetic elements: promoters, ribosome binding sites, mRNA stability sequences and transcription terminators.
Microviruses are distinguished by their two scaffolding protein system, whereas Gokushoviruses utilise a single scaffolding protein.
Capsid assembly is mediated by scaffolding proteins, which induce conformational switches in the viral coat protein to control the timing and fidelity of morphogenesis.
Cell lysis is achieved by inhibiting host cell wall biosynthesis, a mechanism reminiscent of some antibiotics.