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Coming-of-Age Characterization of Soil Viruses: A User’s Guide to Virus Isolation, Detection within Metagenomes, and Viromics

Gareth Trubl, Paul Hyman, Simon Roux, Stephen T. Abedon

2020Soil Systems99 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The study of soil viruses, though not new, has languished relative to the study of marine viruses. This is particularly due to challenges associated with separating virions from harboring soils. Generally, three approaches to analyzing soil viruses have been employed: (1) Isolation, to characterize virus genotypes and phenotypes, the primary method used prior to the start of the 21st century. (2) Metagenomics, which has revealed a vast diversity of viruses while also allowing insights into viral community ecology, although with limitations due to DNA from cellular organisms obscuring viral DNA. (3) Viromics (targeted metagenomics of virus-like-particles), which has provided a more focused development of ‘virus-sequence-to-ecology’ pipelines, a result of separation of presumptive virions from cellular organisms prior to DNA extraction. This separation permits greater sequencing emphasis on virus DNA and thereby more targeted molecular and ecological characterization of viruses. Employing viromics to characterize soil systems presents new challenges, however. Ones that only recently are being addressed. Here we provide a guide to implementing these three approaches to studying environmental viruses, highlighting benefits, difficulties, and potential contamination, all toward fostering greater focus on viruses in the study of soil ecology.

Topics & Concepts

MetagenomicsBiologyHuman viromeIsolation (microbiology)VirusEnvironmental DNADNA sequencingMolecular ecologyEcologyComputational biologyVirologyDNABiodiversityGeneticsGeneMicrobiologyPopulationSociologyDemographyBacteriophages and microbial interactionsPlant Virus Research StudiesPlant and Fungal Interactions Research