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Oceans reveal secrets of viruses.


Earth teems with bacteria-eating viruses. There are perhaps 10 times as many of these viruses as of all other living things put together. Yet researchers don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 how many virus species there are, how they are distributed around the globe, or how diverse their genes are. Now, a team of scientists has begun to answer those questions, completing the first survey of virus DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 in oceans around the world.

Scientists knew that each milliliter milliliter /mil·li·li·ter/ (mL) (-le?ter) one thousandth (10-3) of a liter.

mil·li·li·ter
n. Abbr.
 of ocean Water holds about 50 million virus particles and that those organisms kill 20 percent of the bacteria in the ocean every day (SN: 7/12/2003, p. 26). In the process, viruses move gene sequences from one bacterium to another, speeding evolution and turning some bacteria virulent.

Curtis Suttle of the University of British Columbia Locations
Vancouver
The Vancouver campus is located at Point Grey, a twenty-minute drive from downtown Vancouver. It is near several beaches and has views of the North Shore mountains. The 7.
 in Vancouver began collecting samples of ocean water from around the world in 1998. He saved them, waiting for genomic sequencing to become inexpensive enough to reveal the genes of all the viruses in the water at once.

That time finally came. Suttle, Forest Rohwer of San Diego State University San Diego State University (SDSU), founded in 1897 as San Diego Normal School, is the largest and oldest higher education facility in the greater San Diego area (generally the City and County of San Diego), and is part of the California State University system. , and several colleagues analyzed 1,300 samples of ocean water from the Arctic, British Columbia's coast, the Gulf of Mexico Noun 1. Gulf of Mexico - an arm of the Atlantic to the south of the United States and to the east of Mexico
Golfo de Mexico

Atlantic, Atlantic Ocean - the 2nd largest ocean; separates North and South America on the west from Europe and Africa on the east
, and the Sargasso Sea. They report in the November PLoS Biology that 91 percent of the DNA sequences in the water were previously unknown.

The DNA sequences suggest that each area of the ocean contains its own characteristic community of viruses. The researchers were surprised to find that many viruses found in the Sargasso Sea have a single strand of DNA rather than the typical two strands. Such viruses had never previously been found in the ocean.--J.J.R.
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Title Annotation:BIOLOGY
Publication:Science News
Date:Dec 2, 2006
Words:281
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