- Needham, David M;
- Yoshizawa, Susumu;
- Hosaka, Toshiaki;
- Poirier, Camille;
- Choi, Chang Jae;
- Hehenberger, Elisabeth;
- Irwin, Nicholas AT;
- Wilken, Susanne;
- Yung, Cheuk-Man;
- Bachy, Charles;
- Kurihara, Rika;
- Nakajima, Yu;
- Kojima, Keiichi;
- Kimura-Someya, Tomomi;
- Leonard, Guy;
- Malmstrom, Rex R;
- Mende, Daniel R;
- Olson, Daniel K;
- Sudo, Yuki;
- Sudek, Sebastian;
- Richards, Thomas A;
- DeLong, Edward F;
- Keeling, Patrick J;
- Santoro, Alyson E;
- Shirouzu, Mikako;
- Iwasaki, Wataru;
- Worden, Alexandra Z
Giant viruses are remarkable for their large genomes, often rivaling those of small bacteria, and for having genes thought exclusive to cellular life. Most isolated to date infect nonmarine protists, leaving their strategies and prevalence in marine environments largely unknown. Using eukaryotic single-cell metagenomics in the Pacific, we discovered a Mimiviridae lineage of giant viruses, which infects choanoflagellates, widespread protistan predators related to metazoans. The ChoanoVirus genomes are the largest yet from pelagic ecosystems, with 442 of 862 predicted proteins lacking known homologs. They are enriched in enzymes for modifying organic compounds, including degradation of chitin, an abundant polysaccharide in oceans, and they encode 3 divergent type-1 rhodopsins (VirR) with distinct evolutionary histories from those that capture sunlight in cellular organisms. One (VirRDTS) is similar to the only other putative rhodopsin from a virus (PgV) with a known host (a marine alga). Unlike the algal virus, ChoanoViruses encode the entire pigment biosynthesis pathway and cleavage enzyme for producing the required chromophore, retinal. We demonstrate that the rhodopsin shared by ChoanoViruses and PgV binds retinal and pumps protons. Moreover, our 1.65-Å resolved VirRDTS crystal structure and mutational analyses exposed differences from previously characterized type-1 rhodopsins, all of which come from cellular organisms. Multiple VirR types are present in metagenomes from across surface oceans, where they are correlated with and nearly as abundant as a canonical marker gene from Mimiviridae Our findings indicate that light-dependent energy transfer systems are likely common components of giant viruses of photosynthetic and phagotrophic unicellular marine eukaryotes.