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Abstract
Mimivirus was identified in 2003 from a biofilm of an industrial water-cooling tower in England. Later, numerous new giant viruses were found in oceans and freshwater habitats, some of them having 2,500 genes. We have demonstrated their likely presence in four soil samples taken from the Kutch Desert (Gujarat, India). Here we describe a bioinformatics work-flow, called the “Giant Virus Finder” that is capable of discovering the likely presence of the genomes of giant viruses in metagenomic shotgun-sequenced datasets. The new workflow is applied to numerous hot and cold desert soil samples as well as some tundra- and forest soils. We show that most of these samples contain giant viruses, especially in the Antarctic dry valleys. The results imply that giant viruses could be frequent not only in aqueous habitats, but in a wide spectrum of soils on our planet.
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PIT Bioinformatics Group, Eötvös University, Pázmány Péter stny. 1/C, Budapest, 1117, Hungary
Csaba Kerepesi & Vince Grolmusz
Uratim Ltd., Budapest, 1118, Hungary
Vince Grolmusz
Institute for Computer Science and Control, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, 1111, Hungary
Csaba Kerepesi
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Correspondence toVince Grolmusz.
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C. Kerepesi and V. Grolmusz declare no conflict of interest.
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Kerepesi, C., Grolmusz, V. The “Giant Virus Finder” discovers an abundance of giant viruses in the Antarctic dry valleys.Arch Virol162, 1671–1676 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00705-017-3286-4
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