info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Intergeneric recombination between a new, spinach-infecting curtovirus and a new geminivirus belonging to the genus Becurtovirus: first New World exemplar
Autor
Cecilia Hernandez-Zepeda
Resumen
A novel curtovirus, spinach severe curly top
virus (SSCTV), was associated with symptomatic spinach
plants collected from a commercial field in south-central
Arizona during 2009. In addition, a second viral molecule
of about 2.9 kb from the same spinach plants was ampli-
fied, cloned and sequenced. The latter isolate, herein
named spinach curly top Arizona virus (SCTAV), was
found to share 77 % pairwise sequence identity with beet
curly top Iran virus (BCTIV), a leafhopper-transmitted
geminivirus that has been assigned to the new genus Becurtovirus.
The SCTAV genome encodes three viral-sense
genes, V1, V2, and V3, and two complementary-sense
genes, C1 and C2. There was no evidence for the presence
of either a C3 or C4 ORF in the genome sequence. The
genome organization of SCTAV is not like that of New
World curtoviruses but instead is similar to that of BCTIV,
which, to date, is only known to be present in Iran. Consistent
with this observation, SCTAV and BCTIV both
contain the unusual nonanucleotide TAAGATT/CC and a
replication-associated protein, Rep (or C1), that is more
closely related to the mastrevirus Rep than to those of
curtoviruses reported to date. Both SSCTV and SCTAV
were found to have a recombinant genome containing
sequences (AY548948) derived from ancestral SCTV
sequences in the virion-sense portions of the genome.
Agroinoculation of Nicotiana benthamiana (Domin) plants
with the cloned genome of SCTAV resulted in infection of
95 % of the plants and the development of severe curling
symptoms, whereas only 20 % of the SSCTV-inoculated
plants were infected, developing only mild curling symptoms.
When plants were co-inoculated with both viruses,
the frequency of infection remained higher for SCTAV
than for SSCTV (80 % vs. 20 %), indicating no evidence
of synergistic effects between the two viruses with respect
to efficiency of infection.