If you were to guess right now what kinds of organisms
have driven some scientists to believe that another branch of life
exists, what would they be? Hideous, green aliens or maybe man-eating
flies? Actually, the organisms in question are neither alive nor visible
to the naked human eye. Recently identified giant viruses – literally
just uncommonly large viruses – are the organisms responsible for this
new line of thinking.
Giant viruses appear to have been hiding from us in plain sight (figuratively speaking of course). In
2003,
a group of French researchers identified the first mega viruses in a
cooling tower, where they had been living off of amoebas. Since then,
other giant viruses have been found in swamps, contact lens fluid (!), a
pond in
Australia, and off the coast of
Chile.
The recent identification of giant viruses doesn’t mean that they have
suddenly appeared on Earth in the last ten years. On the contrary, it
signifies the changing notions of what it means to be a virus.
Scientists have long thought that viruses are small and fairly simple.
Seeing that giant viruses are neither, other scientists who may have
found them before now probably assumed that they were just
bacteria.Giant
viruses are unique because of their immense size and vast number of
genes. In comparison to other viruses, giant viruses are like lions
amongst mere house cats – larger, and more complex. Since the discovery
of the first few giant viruses, such as
Mimivirus and
Megavirus chilensis,
two extremely large new ones have been identified. Known as
Pandoraviruses, for their box like shape, these two particular specimens
are the largest viruses ever found. How large are they? So large that
they can be seen under a light microscope. Pandoraviruses are even
bigger than some
eukaryotic cells, the ones humans are made of, which is radical since they are after all viruses.
The number of genes Pandoraviruses have is especially noteworthy. Their genomes range from
1,900 to 2,500 genes. In comparison, the influenza virus has a mere
13
genes while humans have roughly 24,000. What’s more, only 7% of their
genes have been seen before in other organisms, meaning that the other
93% is foreign.
According
to Jean-Michel Claverie and Chantal Abergel, who are researchers on
Pandoraviruses, “the lack of similarity of most of their genes with
other life forms might be an indication that they originated from a
totally different primitive cellular lineage.” As of now, three domains
of life are recognized: Bacteria, single-celled Archaea and Eukaryotes,
the domain plants, animals, and humans belong to. Pandoraviruses’
foreignness alludes to the possibility of a fourth branch of life
distinct from the other three and greater biological diversity.
Hand in hand with the theory of a fourth domain is the idea that
Pandoraviruses and other giant viruses descended from primitive, living
cells separate from bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotic cells. If so, then
ancient cells must have embarked on two different evolutionary paths:
some gave rise to “
modern life” while others evolved into viruses.
Giant viruses, as far as we know, are harmless to humans. They have
been found lurking in amoebas inside the human body but don’t appear to
cause any sickness. Only time and more research will tell if they
actually can wreck havoc in the body. There is even some evidence that
they are
useful,
not to humans but to the oceans. Pandoraviruses found in water regulate
some populations of phytoplankton, which contribute significantly to
the world´s supply of oxygen, by preying on them.The French scientists
who discovered Pandoraviruses are hopeful that future studies on the
viruses will lead to further “
biomedical and biotechnical innovations“.
Overall, I think that the discovery of giant viruses shows that much
biological diversity on earth is still unknown to humans and worth
discovering.
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