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Abstract
Metagenomic analysis of viruses suggests novel patterns of evolution, changes the
existing ideas of the composition of the virus world and reveals novel groups of viruses
and virus-like agents. The gene composition of the marine DNA virome is dramatically
different from that of known bacteriophages. The virome is dominated by rare genes,
many of which might be contained within virus-like entities such as gene transfer
agents. Analysis of marine metagenomes thought to consist mostly of bacterial genes
revealed a variety of sequences homologous to conserved genes of eukaryotic nucleocytoplasmic
large DNA viruses, resulting in the discovery of diverse members of previously undersampled
groups and suggesting the existence of new classes of virus-like agents. Unexpectedly,
metagenomics of marine RNA viruses showed that representatives of only one superfamily
of eukaryotic viruses, the picorna-like viruses, dominate the RNA virome.