homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Biggest Virus Ever Found

Some 20.000 years ago, mammoths and other giant fauna roamed the Earth. So too did this giant virus – the only difference is that this virus, Pithovirus sibericum, is still around and doing fine. Large enough to be seen under a light microscope, Pithovirus sibericum is not the first megavirus to be found, but at […]

Mihai Andrei
March 11, 2014 @ 11:42 am

share Share

Some 20.000 years ago, mammoths and other giant fauna roamed the Earth. So too did this giant virus – the only difference is that this virus, Pithovirus sibericum, is still around and doing fine.

Pithovirus sibericum is ~1.5 µm long with a 0.5 µm diameter.
Credit: Courtesy of Julia Bartoli & Chantal Abergel

Large enough to be seen under a light microscope, Pithovirus sibericum is not the first megavirus to be found, but at 1.5 micrometers (µm) in length, it is the largest. The average virus measures somewhere between 20 and 300 nanometers (nm), and the really big ones measure under 1.000 in length. If you’re not remembering your units of measure, 1 µ = 1.000 nm, so our megavirus measures 1.500 nm in length.

Two other families of giant viruses have been found in Chile and Australia, with genomes occasionally more complex than that of bacteria. Researchers found P. sibericum in the Siberian permafrost, hence the name (it’s long like a python and it was found in Siberia).

Discovery of this new family of Pithoviruses reveals that giant viruses are “much more diverse than initially assumed,” argue Chantal Abergel and Jean-Michel Claverie at the Structural & Genomic Information Laboratory at Aix-Marseille University, in France (Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA, 2014, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1320670111). Our huge virus doesn’t have a well developed capsid (protein shell), like most smaller viruses do. Instead, P. sibericum DNA is enclosed by a thick membranelike envelope, similar to that encasing Pandoravirus, the megavirus discovered in 2011. Although P. sibericum is 50% larger than the 1-µm-long Pandoravirus, its genome encodes much less proteins than the Pandoravirus.

But the nature of some of these proteins is still a mystery for researchers. The vast majority of these proteins are of unknown structure and function, a bounty of hundreds of ancient proteins “that simply don’t resemble anything we’ve seen before,” Abergel says. “There are more proteins here for structural biologists to study than is possible in a lifetime of work.”

“We also need to study their molecular mechanisms of infection,” comments Eugene V. Koonin, who studies megaviruses at the National Center for Biotechnology Information, in Bethesda, Md. Pithovirus, for example, appears to have a plug in its membranous envelope that must be “uncorked” for infection to occur, he adds.

share Share

What's Seasonal Body Image Dissatisfaction and How Not to Fall into Its Trap

This season doesn’t have to be about comparison or self-criticism.

Why a 20-Minute Nap Could Be Key to Unlocking 'Eureka!' Moments Like Salvador Dalí

A 20-minute nap can boost your chances of a creative breakthrough, according to new research.

The world's oldest boomerang is even older than we thought, but it's not Australian

The story of the boomerang goes back in time even more.

Swarms of tiny robots could go up your nose, melt the mucus and clean your sinuses

The "search-and-destroy” microrobot system can chemically shred the resident bacterial biofilm.

What if Every Roadkill Had a Memorial?

Road ecology, the scientific study of how road networks impact ecosystems, presents a perfect opportunity for community science projects.

Fireball Passes Over Southeastern United States

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s… a bolide!

What side do cats prefer to sleep on? The left side, and there's a good reason for that

The fluffier side of science.

This Bear Lived Two Years With a Barrel Lid Stuck on Its Neck Before Finally Being Freed

A Michigan bear wore a plastic ring for two years. Somehow, it’s doing just fine.

The James Webb telescope just found a planet by actually ‘seeing’ it

It's exactly what we were hoping from JWST.

Is Being Filthy Rich Immoral? It Depends Who You Ask

The world's 8 richest people have more wealth than the poorest few billion.