Literature DB >> 16474141

Distinct viral populations differentiate and evolve independently in a single perennial host plant.

Chiraz Jridi1, Jean-François Martin, Véronique Marie-Jeanne, Gérard Labonne, Stéphane Blanc.   

Abstract

The complex structure of virus populations has been the object of intensive study in bacteria, animals, and plants for over a decade. While it is clear that tremendous genetic diversity is rapidly generated during viral replication, the distribution of this diversity within a single host remains an obscure area in this field of science. Among animal viruses, only Human immunodeficiency virus and Hepatitis C virus populations have recently been thoroughly investigated at an intrahost level, where they are structured as metapopulations, demonstrating that the host cannot be considered simply as a "bag" containing a homogeneous or unstructured swarm of mutant viral genomes. In plants, a few reports suggested a possible heterogeneous distribution of virus variants at different locations within the host but provided no clues as to how this heterogeneity is structured. Here, we report the most exhaustive study of the structure and evolution of a virus population ever reported at the intrahost level through the analysis of a Prunus tree infected by Plum pox virus for over 13 years following a single inoculation event and by using analysis of molecular variance at different hierarchical levels combined with nested clade analysis. We demonstrate that, following systemic invasion of the host, the virus population differentiates into several distinct populations that are isolated in different branches, where they evolve independently through contiguous range expansion while colonizing newly formed organs. Moreover, we present and discuss evidence that the tree harbors a huge "bank" of viral clones, each isolated in one of the myriad leaves.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16474141      PMCID: PMC1395380          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.80.5.2349-2357.2006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


  42 in total

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8.  Nucleotide and amino acid complexity of hepatitis C virus quasispecies in serum and liver.

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Review 9.  The evolution of RNA viruses: A population genetics view.

Authors:  A Moya; S F Elena; A Bracho; R Miralles; E Barrio
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  38 in total

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3.  Insights into the selective pressures restricting Pelargonium flower break virus genome variability: Evidence for host adaptation.

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4.  The Multiplicity of Cellular Infection Changes Depending on the Route of Cell Infection in a Plant Virus.

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5.  Genetic structure and population variability of tomato yellow leaf curl China virus.

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6.  Evolution of Specialization in Heterogeneous Environments: Equilibrium Between Selection, Mutation and Migration.

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7.  Dynamics of the multiplicity of cellular infection in a plant virus.

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8.  Small effective population sizes and rare nonsynonymous variants in potyviruses.

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9.  Stem pitting and seedling yellows symptoms of Citrus tristeza virus infection may be determined by minor sequence variants.

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