My question is out of curiosity and got me thinking. How did viruses with the head, tail and tail fibres actually evolve? These viruses look more like machines than biological entities. Are there any theories to how these viruses evolved?
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13$\begingroup$ Does a biological entity not look like a machine? Look closer. $\endgroup$– PreeceCommented Apr 17, 2012 at 0:52
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6$\begingroup$ A bird looks like an aeroplane too... $\endgroup$– nicoCommented Apr 19, 2012 at 18:50
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$\begingroup$ If you look from another perspective machines resemble biological entities. $\endgroup$– kiranCommented Jul 5, 2016 at 11:07
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$\begingroup$ Useful book origin and evolution of viruses sciencedirect.com/book/9780123741530/… $\endgroup$– JohnCommented Jun 10 at 20:15
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1 Answer
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I found a book chapter for you here
Quick summary: 3 hypotheses to Origin of viruses
- From pre-cellular world (virus first hypothesis)
- From reductive evolution of parasites (reduction hypothesis)
- From fragments of cellular genetic material (escape hypothesis)
Drawbacks:
- virus require cells (to infect) so how can they come first
- virus do not look like known reduced parasites from Bacteria/Eukarya/Archaea
- unlikely that genetic fragments form complex viral structures for viral function
Because of these drawbacks, the problem of virus origin was for a long time considered untractable and not worth serious consideration
The rest of the chapter looks more in-depth into the 3 hypotheses
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10$\begingroup$ Could you summarise in your answer perhaps? It’s preferred here to preferred here to provide links for further information and references, not as the sole point of the answer. $\endgroup$ Commented Apr 19, 2012 at 9:47