| Literature DB >> 23886668 |
Pauline Bernardo1, Michael Golden, Mohammad Akram, Nagaswamy Nadarajan, Emmanuel Fernandez, Martine Granier, Anthony G Rebelo, Michel Peterschmitt, Darren P Martin, Philippe Roumagnac.
Abstract
During a large scale "non a priori" survey in 2010 of South African plant-infecting single stranded DNA viruses, a highly divergent geminivirus genome was isolated from a wild spurge, Euphorbia caput-medusae. In addition to being infectious in E. caput-medusae, the cloned viral genome was also infectious in tomato and Nicotiana benthamiana. The virus, named Euphorbia caput-medusae latent virus (EcmLV) due to the absence of infection symptoms displayed by its natural host, caused severe symptoms in both tomato and N. benthamiana. The genome organisation of EcmLV is unique amongst geminiviruses and it likely expresses at least two proteins without any detectable homologues within public sequence databases. Although clearly a geminivirus, EcmLV is so divergent that we propose its placement within a new genus that we have tentatively named Capulavirus. Using a set of highly divergent geminiviruses genomes, it is apparent that recombination has likely been a primary process in the genus-level diversification of geminiviruses. It is also demonstrated how this insight, taken together with phylogenetic analyses of predicted coat protein and replication associated protein (Rep) amino acid sequences indicate that the most recent common ancestor of the geminiviruses was likely a dicot-infecting virus that, like modern day mastreviruses and becurtoviruses, expressed its Rep from a spliced complementary strand transcript.Entities:
Keywords: DNA viruses; Evolution; Geminivirus; Phylogenetic analysis; Plant viruses; Taxonomy
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23886668 DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2013.07.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virus Res ISSN: 0168-1702 Impact factor: 3.303