Microbes that can only Eat Viruses.

imhotep

Well-known member
  • Mar 29, 2017
    14,825
    8
    35,339
    113
    Tiny, pond-dwelling Halteria ciliates are virovores, able to survive on a virus-only diet. These single-celled creatures are the first known to thrive when viruses alone are on the menu.

    Scientists already knew that some microscopic organisms snack on aquatic viruses such as chloroviruses, which infect and kill algae. But it was unclear whether viruses alone could provide enough nutrients for an organism to grow and reproduce, says ecologist John DeLong of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln.

    In laboratory experiments, Halteria that were living in water droplets and given only chloroviruses for sustenance reproduced, DeLong and colleagues found. As the number of viruses in the water dwindled, Halteria numbers went up. Ciliates without access to viral morsels, or any other food, didn’t multiply. But Paramecium, a larger microbe, didn’t thrive on a virus-only diet, hinting that viruses can’t satisfy the nutritional requirements for all ciliates to grow.

    Viruses could be a good source of phosphorus, which is essential for making copies of genetic material, DeLong says. But it probably takes a lot of viruses to account for a full meal.

    In the lab, each Halteria microbe ate about 10,000 to 1 million viruses daily, the team estimates. Halteria in small ponds with abundant viral snacks might chow down on about a quadrillion viruses per day.

    These feasts could shunt previously unrecognized energy into the food web, and add a new layer to the way viruses move carbon through an ecosystem — if it happens in the wild.

    Halteria.jpg

    Halteria ciliates (three shown) each ate around 10,000 to 1 million viruses daily in laboratory experiments. In the wild, that number could skyrocket to up to around 1 quadrillion, scientists estimate.
     

    imhotep

    Well-known member
  • Mar 29, 2017
    14,825
    8
    35,339
    113
    so like Phages but for viruses?
    Yes... It's a complex world. Some viruses are in fact beneficial to us. These are the Good Boy viruses. Eg GBV-C, an asymptomatic blood-borne virus, slows progression to AIDS in people with HIV and lowers the risk that infection with Ebola virus - but it does not cause a human infection on its own.
    Certain herpesviruses and cytomegaloviruses prevent infection by Listeria and Yersinia pestis, which causes bubonic plague.
    Even harmful viruses can harbor disease-combating strategies for scientists to adapt. The hepatitis A virus can protect against hepatitis C, and researchers have used lymphoma-associated viruses to cure type 1 diabetes in mice.
    It's a yet still unfathomed world of virii.. one day someone will hopefully discover which ones can be used to combat other diseases.