Literature DB >> 18175211

Diversity and prevalence of Brazilian bipartite begomovirus species associated to tomatoes.

Fernanda Rausch Fernandes1, Leonardo Cunha de Albuquerque, Leonardo de Britto Giordano, Leonardo Silva Boiteux, Antonio Carlos de Avila, Alice Kazuko Inoue-Nagata.   

Abstract

Information on the distribution and prevalence of the economically destructive Begomovirus species and recombinant forms infecting fresh-market and processing tomato crops in Brazil is crucial in guiding breeding programs and also to understand the evolutionary mechanisms associated with the upsurge of so many species and quasi-species comprising this unique disease complex. An extensive survey was carried out over 3 years (between 2002 and 2004) aiming to study the diversity of begomoviruses in tomato plants, predominantly collected in central Brazil. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with degenerated primers was used to detect the begomoviruses in tomato leaf samples showing virus-like symptoms in commercial fields. Seven hundred and seventeen out of 2,295 samples were found to be PCR positive for a begomovirus infection. High quality sequences were obtained from a fragment encompassing the 5' region of the coat protein (CP) gene and a segment of the intergenic region for 295 isolates from distinct geographic regions. Comparison analyses with those available in public databases enabled preliminary classification of the isolates into four previously described and/or proposed species: Tomato severe rugose virus (61%), Tomato golden vein virus (29.8%), Tomato mottle leaf curl virus (7.1%), Tomato yellow vein streak virus (0.7%), and two putative new species (1.4% of isolates). Within the prevailing species, we noted a relatively low degree of diversity, possibly indicating the existence of recent population founder effects and/or recent selective sweeps.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18175211     DOI: 10.1007/s11262-007-0184-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Virus Genes        ISSN: 0920-8569            Impact factor:   2.332


  11 in total

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5.  CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice.

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6.  A naturally occurring recombinant DNA-A of a typical bipartite begomovirus does not require the cognate DNA-B to infect Nicotiana benthamiana systemically.

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7.  Tomato yellow spot virus, a tomato-infecting begomovirus from Brazil with a closer relationship to viruses from Sida sp., forms pseudorecombinants with begomoviruses from tomato but not from Sida.

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8.  Distribution and genetic diversity of tomato-infecting begomoviruses in Brazil.

Authors:  S G Ribeiro; L P Ambrozevícius; A C Avila; I C Bezerra; R F Calegario; J J Fernandes; M F Lima; R N de Mello; H Rocha; F M Zerbini
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9.  Classification and identification of geminiviruses using sequence comparisons.

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  11 in total

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Review 5.  Biological invasions of geminiviruses: case study of TYLCV and Bemisia tabaci in Reunion Island.

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9.  Recombination and pseudorecombination driving the evolution of the begomoviruses Tomato severe rugose virus (ToSRV) and Tomato rugose mosaic virus (ToRMV): two recombinant DNA-A components sharing the same DNA-B.

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10.  Metagenomics of Neotropical Single-Stranded DNA Viruses in Tomato Cultivars with and without the Ty-1 Gene.

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