Newly Discovered Virus Has Multi-Part Genome

A “multicomponent” virus isolated from mosquitoes infects in stages and reassembles once the pieces are inside the host.

Written byBob Grant
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A mosquito from the genus Culex, which harbors Guaico Culex virusWIKIMEDIA, ALAN R. WALKERResearchers have discovered a new, “multicomponent” virus that infects mosquitoes: one of the first times that such a virus isolated from an animal. The new virus—named the Guaico Culex virus (GCXV) by the scientists who described it in a Cell Host & Microbe paper published this week (August 25)—has a genome that comes in five pieces, each of which is separately packaged. In order for a mosquito to be infected by the virus, at least four of these segments must invade the host.

“It’s the most bizarre thing,” Edward Holmes, a virologist at the University of Sydney, told NPR’s Goats and Soda. “If you compare it to the human body, it’s like a person would have their legs, trunk and arms all in different places,” added Holmes, who was not involved with the study. “Then all the pieces come together in some way to work as one single virus. I don’t think anything else in nature moves this way.”

Viruses with multicomponent genomes commonly infect plants and fungi, but they are far rarer in animals.

The study that discovered and described GCXV was part of a broader effort to better understand mosquito-borne viruses. The research team reported finding a variant of the new virus in a red colobus ...

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Meet the Author

  • From 2017 to 2022, Bob Grant was Editor in Chief of The Scientist, where he started in 2007 as a Staff Writer. Before joining the team, he worked as a reporter at Audubon and earned a master’s degree in science journalism from New York University. In his previous life, he pursued a career in science, getting a bachelor’s degree in wildlife biology from Montana State University and a master’s degree in marine biology from the College of Charleston in South Carolina. Bob edited Reading Frames and other sections of the magazine.

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