Mimivirus, a parasite of Acanthamoeba polyphaga, is the largest DNA virus known; it encodes a cornucopia of proteins with imputed functions in DNA replication, modification, and repair. Here we produced, purified, and characterized mimivirus DNA ligase (MimiLIG), an NAD + -dependent nick joining enzyme homologous to bacterial LigA and entomopoxvirus DNA ligase. MimiLIG is a 636-aa polypeptide composed of an N-terminal NAD + specificity module (domain Ia), linked to nucleotidyltransferase, OB-fold, helix–hairpin–helix, and BRCT domains, but it lacks the tetracysteine Zn-binding module found in all bacterial LigA enzymes. MimiLIG requires conserved domain Ia residues Tyr36, Asp46, Tyr49, and Asp50 for its initial reaction with NAD + to form the ligase–AMP intermediate, but not for the third step of phosphodiester formation at a preadenylylated nick. MimiLIG differs from bacterial LigA enzymes in that its activity is strongly dependent on the C-terminal BRCT domain, deletion of which reduced its specific activity in nick joining by 75-fold without affecting the ligase adenylylation step. The ΔBRCT mutant of MimiLIG was impaired in sealing at a preadenylylated nick. We propose that eukaryal DNA viruses acquired the NAD + -dependent ligases by horizontal transfer from a bacterium and that MimiLIG predates entomopoxvirus ligase, which lacks both the tetracysteine and BRCT domains. We speculate that the dissemination of NAD + -dependent ligase from bacterium to eukaryotic virus might have occurred within an amoebal host.