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Molecular and pathobiological characterization of 61 Potato mop‐top virus full‐length cDNAs reveals great variability of the virus in the centre of potato domestication, novel genotypes and evidence for recombination

The evolutionary divergence of Potato mop‐top virus (PMTV), a tri‐partite, single‐stranded RNA virus, is exceptionally low, based on the analysis of sequences obtained from isolates from Europe, Asia and North America. In general, RNA viruses exist as dynamic populations of closely related and recom...

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Autores principales: Kalyandurg, Pruthvi, Gil, Jose Fernando, Lukhovitskaya, Nina I., Flores, Betty, Müller, Giovanna, Chuquillanqui, Carlos, Palomino, Ladislao, Monjane, Aderito, Barker, Ian, Kreuze, Jan, Savenkov, Eugene I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6638219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28390168
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mpp.12552
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author Kalyandurg, Pruthvi
Gil, Jose Fernando
Lukhovitskaya, Nina I.
Flores, Betty
Müller, Giovanna
Chuquillanqui, Carlos
Palomino, Ladislao
Monjane, Aderito
Barker, Ian
Kreuze, Jan
Savenkov, Eugene I.
author_facet Kalyandurg, Pruthvi
Gil, Jose Fernando
Lukhovitskaya, Nina I.
Flores, Betty
Müller, Giovanna
Chuquillanqui, Carlos
Palomino, Ladislao
Monjane, Aderito
Barker, Ian
Kreuze, Jan
Savenkov, Eugene I.
author_sort Kalyandurg, Pruthvi
collection PubMed
description The evolutionary divergence of Potato mop‐top virus (PMTV), a tri‐partite, single‐stranded RNA virus, is exceptionally low, based on the analysis of sequences obtained from isolates from Europe, Asia and North America. In general, RNA viruses exist as dynamic populations of closely related and recombinant genomes that are subjected to continuous genetic variation. The reason behind the low genetic variation of PMTV remains unclear. The question remains as to whether the low variability is a shared property of all PMTV isolates or is a result of the limited number of isolates characterized so far. We hypothesized that higher divergence of the virus might exist in the Andean regions of South America, the centre of potato domestication. Here, we report high variability of PMTV isolates collected from 12 fields in three locations in the Andean region of Peru. To evaluate PMTV genetic variation in Peru, we generated full‐length cDNA clones, which allowed reliable comparative molecular and pathobiological characterization of individual isolates. We found significant divergence of the CP‐RT and 8K sequences. The 8K cistron, which encodes a viral suppressor of RNA silencing, was found to be under diversifying selection. Phylogenetic analysis determined that, based on the CP‐RT sequence, all PMTV isolates could be categorized into three separate lineages (clades). Moreover, we found evidence for recombination between two clades. Using infectious cDNA clones of the representatives of these two clades, as well as reassortants for the RNA‐CP genomic component, we determined the pathobiological differences between the lineages, which we coined as S (for severe) and M (for mild) types. Interestingly, all isolates characterized previously (from Europe, Asia and North America) fall into the S‐type clade, whereas most of the Peruvian isolates belong to the M‐type. Taken together, our results support the notion of the single introduction of PMTV from the centre of potato origin to Europe, and subsequent spread of the S‐type into Asia and USA. This is also supported by the suggested novel classification of isolates based on genetic constellations.
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spelling pubmed-66382192019-09-16 Molecular and pathobiological characterization of 61 Potato mop‐top virus full‐length cDNAs reveals great variability of the virus in the centre of potato domestication, novel genotypes and evidence for recombination Kalyandurg, Pruthvi Gil, Jose Fernando Lukhovitskaya, Nina I. Flores, Betty Müller, Giovanna Chuquillanqui, Carlos Palomino, Ladislao Monjane, Aderito Barker, Ian Kreuze, Jan Savenkov, Eugene I. Mol Plant Pathol Original Articles The evolutionary divergence of Potato mop‐top virus (PMTV), a tri‐partite, single‐stranded RNA virus, is exceptionally low, based on the analysis of sequences obtained from isolates from Europe, Asia and North America. In general, RNA viruses exist as dynamic populations of closely related and recombinant genomes that are subjected to continuous genetic variation. The reason behind the low genetic variation of PMTV remains unclear. The question remains as to whether the low variability is a shared property of all PMTV isolates or is a result of the limited number of isolates characterized so far. We hypothesized that higher divergence of the virus might exist in the Andean regions of South America, the centre of potato domestication. Here, we report high variability of PMTV isolates collected from 12 fields in three locations in the Andean region of Peru. To evaluate PMTV genetic variation in Peru, we generated full‐length cDNA clones, which allowed reliable comparative molecular and pathobiological characterization of individual isolates. We found significant divergence of the CP‐RT and 8K sequences. The 8K cistron, which encodes a viral suppressor of RNA silencing, was found to be under diversifying selection. Phylogenetic analysis determined that, based on the CP‐RT sequence, all PMTV isolates could be categorized into three separate lineages (clades). Moreover, we found evidence for recombination between two clades. Using infectious cDNA clones of the representatives of these two clades, as well as reassortants for the RNA‐CP genomic component, we determined the pathobiological differences between the lineages, which we coined as S (for severe) and M (for mild) types. Interestingly, all isolates characterized previously (from Europe, Asia and North America) fall into the S‐type clade, whereas most of the Peruvian isolates belong to the M‐type. Taken together, our results support the notion of the single introduction of PMTV from the centre of potato origin to Europe, and subsequent spread of the S‐type into Asia and USA. This is also supported by the suggested novel classification of isolates based on genetic constellations. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6638219/ /pubmed/28390168 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mpp.12552 Text en © 2017 THE AUTHORS. MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY PUBLISHED BY BRITISH SOCIETY FOR PLANT PATHOLOGY AND JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Kalyandurg, Pruthvi
Gil, Jose Fernando
Lukhovitskaya, Nina I.
Flores, Betty
Müller, Giovanna
Chuquillanqui, Carlos
Palomino, Ladislao
Monjane, Aderito
Barker, Ian
Kreuze, Jan
Savenkov, Eugene I.
Molecular and pathobiological characterization of 61 Potato mop‐top virus full‐length cDNAs reveals great variability of the virus in the centre of potato domestication, novel genotypes and evidence for recombination
title Molecular and pathobiological characterization of 61 Potato mop‐top virus full‐length cDNAs reveals great variability of the virus in the centre of potato domestication, novel genotypes and evidence for recombination
title_full Molecular and pathobiological characterization of 61 Potato mop‐top virus full‐length cDNAs reveals great variability of the virus in the centre of potato domestication, novel genotypes and evidence for recombination
title_fullStr Molecular and pathobiological characterization of 61 Potato mop‐top virus full‐length cDNAs reveals great variability of the virus in the centre of potato domestication, novel genotypes and evidence for recombination
title_full_unstemmed Molecular and pathobiological characterization of 61 Potato mop‐top virus full‐length cDNAs reveals great variability of the virus in the centre of potato domestication, novel genotypes and evidence for recombination
title_short Molecular and pathobiological characterization of 61 Potato mop‐top virus full‐length cDNAs reveals great variability of the virus in the centre of potato domestication, novel genotypes and evidence for recombination
title_sort molecular and pathobiological characterization of 61 potato mop‐top virus full‐length cdnas reveals great variability of the virus in the centre of potato domestication, novel genotypes and evidence for recombination
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6638219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28390168
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mpp.12552
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