Dissertação
Caracterização de um alphabaculovírus infectivo para larvas de Spodoptera eridania (Cramer, 1782) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) e a evolução de um gene homólogo de condroitina liase em baculovírus
Fecha
2020-08-21Autor
Rodrigues, Daniela Teixeira
Institución
Resumen
The southern armyworm (Spodoptera eridania) is native to the American tropics and is
considered a polyphagous pest of great economic importance in several crops of Brazil. In this work, a
new alphabaculovirus isolated from S. eridania was characterized at structural, biological and molecular
levels. The isolate belongs to the EMBRAPA-Soja virus colection (Londrina, PR) and received the name
Spodoptera eridania nucleopolyhedrovirus CNPSo-165 (SperNPV-CNPSo-165). Transmission and
scanning electron microscopy showed that the SperNPV-CNPSo-165 occlusion bodies have a
polyhedral shape with multiple virions per nucleocapsid. The virus demonstrated lethality for the third
instar of S. eridania and S. albula (Walker) larvae, but not for S. frugiperda (J.E. smith) at the tested
concentrations. The SperNPV-CNPSo-165 genome has 137,373 bp, 151 ORFs, 4 repetitive regions and
a G+C content of 42.8%. Phylogenetic analysis based on the 38 baculovirus core genes indicated that
the new virus is closely related to the common ancestor of isolates from other species within the
Spodoptera complex, including another isolate also from S. eridania (SperNPV-251). Surprisingly,
SperNPV-CNPSo-165 has a single copy of the odv-e66 gene, a bacterial homologue of chondroitin
lyase, while viruses closely related to SperNPV-CNPSo-165 have two copies. Therefore, the evolution
of odv-e66 in the Baculoviridae family was investigated. Thirteen deletions, sixteen acquisitions and
one duplication of odv-e66 were found among the genomes of the baculoviruses characterized until then.
The analysis suggest that the SperNPV-CNPSo-165 genome appears to have suffered independent loss
of one of the copies of the gene. Thus, studies related to the characterization and evolution of
baculoviruses can provide important information for the development and improvement of biological control tools.