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whitehead home > public programs > ask a scientist > archives > how do viruses originate?
 
Ask a scientist archives

April 30, 2007 — How do viruses originate?

—Vicki Massey, elementary specialist, Mesa (Arizona) Public Schools

Christian Schlieker Response by Christian Schlieker
Whitehead postdoctoral researcher

Despite the fact that we understand a number of viruses in great molecular detail, we know surprisingly little about how they actually originated. Since viruses don’t fossilize well—due to their small size and instability—we don’t quite know what the ancestors of modern viruses looked like billions of years ago. In the absence of any information about the early days of viruses, we have to resort to hypotheses that can be classified as variations of one of the following three theories:

1) The virus-first hypothesis implies that viruses represent a primitive, pre-cellular life form that originated in the prebiotic world (i.e., before unicellular organisms were present). Most scientists have dismissed this idea, since all known viruses have parasitic life-styles that critically rely on the host’s intracellular machinery for their propagation, i.e., there is no evidence that any virus can replicate independent of its host. It thus follows that at least unicellular organisms must have been present before viruses entered the stage.

2) According to the escape theory, viruses are fragments of cellular genomes that escaped from their cellular environment. In this scenario, viruses can be seen as infectious, “selfish” DNA/RNA elements that eventually became autonomous.  In support of this idea, mobile genetic elements have been identified in both uni- and multicellular organisms, and these might be considered as viral precursors.

3) The reduction hypothesis says that viruses are derived from unicellular organisms, which were once endowed with the ability to self-replicate independently. Following uptake by another cellular organism, these virus progenitors lived as intracellular symbionts, reminiscent of some organelles like mitochondria or chloroplasts. Over time, the virus lost more and more of its genome and ultimately established a true parasitic life-style.

These theories are not mutually exclusive, and also don’t necessarily apply to all viruses that we know. Viruses have coevolved with their hosts over billions of years; each virus has developed a unique toolbox to hijack a specific host’s machinery to achieve parasitic perfection. As a consequence, viruses are quite diverse in many regards, and it is thus difficult to envision a common ancestral origin of viruses. It is quite possible that viruses that infect a bacterial cell developed independently and at a different time than those that infect humans, tobacco plants or other organisms.



Last updated April 30, 2007

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