Lost and found: Rediscovery and genomic characterization of sowthistle yellow vein virus after a 30+ year hiatus

Drake C. Stenger, Lindsey P. Burbank, Renyuan Wang, Alexander A. Stewart, Caleb Mathias, Michael M. Goodin

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

11 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Beginning in the 1960’s, sowthistle yellow vein virus (SYVV) was the subject of pioneering research that demonstrated propagation of a plant virus in its insect vector. Since the 1980’s there has been a paucity of research on SYVV, with historic isolates no longer maintained and no genomic sequence available. Once commonly observed infecting sowthistle (Sonchus oleraceous L.) in California, SYVV incidence declined ca. 1990, likely due to displacement of the black currant aphid (Hyperomyzus lactucae L.) by an invasive non-vector aphid. In 2018, SYVV was fortuitously rediscovered infecting sowthistle in an organic citrus grove in Kern County, CA. The SYVV genome sequence (13,719 nts) obtained from the 2018 sample (designated HWY65) encoded all six expected genes: N, P, MP, M, G, and L. Nucleotide sequence (representing ∼86 % of the genome) of the SYVV Berkeley lab isolate, used by E. S. Sylvester and colleagues for the paradigm-shifting research mentioned above, was determined from an archived library of cDNA clones constructed in 1986. The two nucleotide sequences share 98.5 % identity, confirming both represent the same virus, thereby linking biology of the historic isolate with extant SYVV rediscovered in 2018. Phylogenetic analysis of the L protein indicated SYVV is positioned within a clade containing a subset of viruses currently assigned to the genus Nucleorhabdovirus. As Nucleorhabdovirus is paraphyletic, the International Committee on the Taxonomy of Viruses has proposed abolishment of the genus and establishment of three new genera. In this revised taxonomy, the clade containing SYVV constitutes a new genus designated Betanucleorhabdovirus.

Idioma originalEnglish
Número de artículo197987
PublicaciónVirus Research
Volumen284
DOI
EstadoPublished - jul 15 2020

Nota bibliográfica

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020

Financiación

This work was supported by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Hatch project 1020737 and USDA Agricultural Research Service project 2034-22000-012-00D .

FinanciadoresNúmero del financiador
U.S. Department of Agriculture2034-22000-012-00D
US Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Agriculture and Food Research Initiative1020737

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Virology
    • Infectious Diseases
    • Cancer Research

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