Synoptic Variation Drives Genetic Diversity and Transmission Mode of Airborne DNA Viruses in Urban Space

Abstract Airborne viruses are ubiquitous and play critical roles in maintaining ecosystem balance, however, they remain unexplored. Here, it is aimed to demonstrate that highly diverse airborne viromes carry out specific metabolic functions and use different transmission modes under different air qu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aihua Deng, Junyue Wang, Lai Li, Ruilin Shi, Xuemin Li, Tingyi Wen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-12-01
Series:Advanced Science
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202404512
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Summary:Abstract Airborne viruses are ubiquitous and play critical roles in maintaining ecosystem balance, however, they remain unexplored. Here, it is aimed to demonstrate that highly diverse airborne viromes carry out specific metabolic functions and use different transmission modes under different air quality conditions. A total of 263.5‐Gb data are collected from 13 air samples for viral metagenomic analysis. After assembly and curation, a total of 12 484 viral contigs (1.5–184.2 kb) are assigned to 221 genus‐level clades belonging to 47 families, 19 orders, and 15 classes. The composition of viral communities is influenced by weather conditions, with the main biomarker being Caudoviricetes. The most dominant viruses in these air samples belong to the dsDNA Caudoviricetes (54.0%) and ssDNA Repensiviricetes (31.2%) classes. Twelve novel candidate viruses are identified at the order/family/genus levels by alignment of complete genomes and core genes. Notably, Caudoviricetes are highly prevalent in cloudy and smoggy air, whereas Repensiviricetes are highly dominant in sunny and rainy air. Diverse auxiliary metabolic genes of airborne viruses are mainly involved in deoxynucleotide synthesis, implying their unique roles in atmosphere ecosystem. These findings deepen the understanding of the meteorological impacts on viral composition, transmission mode, and ecological roles in the air that we breathe.
ISSN:2198-3844