| Literature DB >> 30126105 |
Varvara I Maliogka1, Angelantonio Minafra2, Pasquale Saldarelli3, Ana B Ruiz-García4, Miroslav Glasa5, Nikolaos Katis6, Antonio Olmos7.
Abstract
Perennial crops, such as fruit trees, are infected by many viruses, which are transmitted through vegetative propagation and grafting of infected plant material. Some of these pathogens cause severe crop losses and often reduce the productive life of the orchards. Detection and characterization of these agents in fruit trees is challenging, however, during the last years, the wide application of high-throughput sequencing (HTS) technologies has significantly facilitated this task. In this review, we present recent advances in the discovery, detection, and characterization of fruit tree viruses and virus-like agents accomplished by HTS approaches. A high number of new viruses have been described in the last 5 years, some of them exhibiting novel genomic features that have led to the proposal of the creation of new genera, and the revision of the current virus taxonomy status. Interestingly, several of the newly identified viruses belong to virus genera previously unknown to infect fruit tree species (e.g., Fabavirus, Luteovirus) a fact that challenges our perspective of plant viruses in general. Finally, applied methodologies, including the use of different molecules as templates, as well as advantages and disadvantages and future directions of HTS in fruit tree virology are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: detection; dsRNA; fruit trees; high-throughput sequencing; new viruses; siRNAs; total RNA; variability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30126105 PMCID: PMC6116224 DOI: 10.3390/v10080436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Currently commercially available high-throughput sequencing equipment.
| Platform | Maximum Read Length (bp) | Sequencing Output | Maximum Number of Reads per Run | Run Time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Illumina | iSeq 100 System | 2 × 150 | 1.2 Gb | 4 million | 9–17.5 h |
| MiniSeq System | 2 × 150 | 7.5 Gb | 25 million | 4–24 h | |
| MiSeq System | 2 × 300 | 15 Gb | 25 million | 4–55 h | |
| NextSeq 550 System | 2 × 150 | 120 Gb | 400 million | 12–30 h | |
| HiSeq 2500 System | 2 × 125/2 × 250 | 1000Gb/300 Gb | 4 billion/600 million | 29 h–6 days/7–60 h | |
| HiSeq 3000 System | 2 × 150 | 750 Gb | 2.5 billion | <1–3.5 days | |
| HiSeq 4000 System | 2 × 150 | 1500 Gb | 5 billion | <1–3.5 days | |
| HiSeq X Series | 2 × 150 | 1800 Gb | 6 billion | <3 days | |
| NovaSeq 6000 System | 2 × 150 | 6000 Gb | 20 billion | 16–44 h | |
| Ion Torrent | PGM (314 chip) | 200/400 | 50/100 Mb | 550 thousand | 2.3/3.7 hr |
| PGM (316 chip) | 200/400 | 300 Mb/1 Gb | 3 million | 3.0/4.9 hr | |
| PGM (318 chip) | 200/400 | 1/2 Gb | 5.5 million | 4.4/7.3 h | |
| Proton PI chip | 200 | 10 Gb | 80 million | 2–4 h | |
| Ion Gene Studio S5 (510 chip) | 200/400 | 0.5/1 Gb | 3 million | 4.5/10.5 | |
| Ion Gene Studio S5 (520 chip) | 200/400/600 | 1/2/1.5 Gb | 6/6/4 million | 7.5/12/12 h | |
| Ion Gene Studio S5 (530 chip) | 200/400/600 | 4/8/4.5 Gb | 20/20/12 million | 10.5/21.5/21 h | |
| Ion Gene Studio S5 (540 chip) | 200 | 15 Gb | 60 million | 19 h | |
| Ion Gene Studio S5 Plus (550 chip) | 200 | 25 Gb | 100 million | 11.5 h | |
|
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| Pacific Biosciences | Sequel System | >1000 | 1–10 Gb | 500.000 | 0.5–10 h |
| PacBioRS II | >1000 (average 10.000) up to 60.000 | 1–10 Gb | 1–10 million | 0.5–6 h | |
| Oxford Nanopore | MinION | 5000 to >100.000 | 10–20 Gb | - | 48 h |
| GridIONx5 | 5000 to >100.000 | 50–100 Gb | - | 48 h | |
| PromethION | 5000 to >100.000 | 1.2 Tb | - | 48 h |
PGM: Personal Genome Machine.
De novo discoveries.
| Virus | Genus | Family | Host | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Actinidia chlorotic ringspot-associated virus |
|
| Actinidia | Zheng et al. [ |
| Actinidia seed-borne latent virus |
|
| Veerakone et al. [ | |
| Apple-associated luteovirus |
|
| apple | Shen et al. [ |
| Apple geminivirus |
|
| Liang et al. [ | |
| Apple necrotic mosaic virus |
|
| Liang et al. [ | |
| Apple rubbery wood virus 1 | (?) |
| Rott et al. [ | |
| Apple rubbery wood virus 2 | (?) |
| Rott et al. [ | |
| Citrus concave gum-associated virus |
| Citrus | Navarro et al. [ | |
| Citrus jingmen-like virus |
|
| Matsumura et al. [ | |
| Citrus leprosis virus-N |
|
| Roy et al. [ | |
| Citrus leprosis virus-C2 |
| Roy et al. [ | ||
|
|
|
| Loconsole et al. [ | |
| Citrus vein enation virus |
|
| Vives et al. [ | |
| Citrus virga-like virus |
|
| Matsumura et al. [ | |
| Citrus chlorotic dwarf-associated virus |
|
| Loconsole et al. [ | |
|
|
|
| cherry | Villamor et al. [ |
|
|
|
| Villamor et al. [ | |
|
|
|
| Villamor et al. [ | |
| Cherry virus F |
|
| sweet cherry, sour cherry | Koloniuk et al. [ |
| Mulberry mosaic dwarf-associated virus | (?) |
| mulberry | Ma et al. [ |
| Mulberry badnavirus 1 |
|
| mulberry | Chiumenti et al. [ |
| Nectarine stem pitting-associated virus |
|
| peach | Bag et al. [ |
| Nectarine virus M |
|
| Villamor et al. [ | |
| Peach leaf pitting-associated virus |
|
| He et al. [ | |
| Peach virus D |
|
| Igori et al. [ | |
| Persimmon cryptic virus |
|
| persimmon | Morelli et al. [ |
| Persimmon virus A |
|
| Ito et al. [ | |
|
|
|
| Prunus | Elbeaino et al. [ |
|
|
|
| Marais et al. [ | |
| Cherry-associated luteovirus |
|
| Lenz et al. [ | |
| Mume virus A |
|
| Marais et al. [ | |
|
|
|
| Marais et al. [ |
?: putatively belongs to a new virus genus.
Detection and virus genetic variability studies.
| Virus | Genus | Family | Host | Aim of the research & New Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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|
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| apple | Differential expression of siRNAs in symptomless infections | Visser et al. [ |
|
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| Actinidia | First HTS-obtained ASGV genome in kiwi | Wang et al. [ |
|
|
|
| Prunus | Genome reconstruction of Asian prunus viruses from 5 samples: phylogenetic and recombination implications | Marais et al. [ |
|
|
|
| Marais et al. [ | ||
| Asian prunus virus 3 |
|
| Marais et al. [ | ||
| cherry-associated luteovirus |
|
| peach | Highly divergent isolate in a new host (peach) | Igori et al. [ |
|
|
|
| cherry | One CNRMV and three CGRMV isolates sequenced from a collection survey | Špak et al. [ |
|
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| |||
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| apricot | First complete sequence by HTS (apricot isolate); Description in apricot on propagation material | Koinuma et al. [ |
|
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| cherry | New isolate from China | Wang et al. [ |
|
|
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| Coinfection of two divergent variants in a wild cherry tree | Glasa et al. [ | |
|
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| HTS survey on 39 Prunus samples: 75 full genomes and phylogenetic implications | Kesanakurti et al. [ | |
| Cherry virus F |
|
| sweet cherry, sour cherry | Virome of 9 samples: co-infection of different viruses and co-existence of multiple fabavirus variants | Koloniuk et al. [ |
| Citrus sudden death virus |
|
| Citrus | Virome analysis of CSD-affected plants: wide variability of genotypes and mixed infections with different viruses | Matsumura et al. [ |
|
|
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| Genotyping 3 cross-protecting CTV strains in grapefruit; CTV p33 amplicons sequencing on 92 field samples: high diversity between and within samples | Zablocki & Pietersen [ | |
|
|
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| siRNAs study: altered siRNAs pattern in CTV-infected plants, hot spot on CTV genome | Visser et al. [ | |
|
|
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| siRNAs analysis: mixed CTV genotypes in resistance-breaking isolates | Yokomi et al. [ | |
|
|
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| Phylogenetic analysis on 2 CTV populations on 225 samples for epidemiology and risk assessment | Licciardello et al. [ | |
|
|
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| siRNAs sequencing of an old lemon isolate of CTV | Varveri et al. [ | |
|
|
|
| siRNAs analysis and phylogeny of 10 isolates of CYVCV | Yu et al. [ | |
| Citrus vein enation virus |
|
| Characterization of 5 Japanese genomes of Citrus vein enation virus | Nakazono-Nakaoga et al. [ | |
|
|
|
| peach | A new isolate sequenced from South Korea in alternate host (peach) | Lim et al. [ |
|
|
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| sweet cherry | New isolate in China | Wang et al. [ |
|
|
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| cherry | Genetic diversity among isolates and co-infection of different variants | Katsiani et al. [ |
|
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| Prunus | First description in Hungary on apricot and in Spain on sweet cherry | Baràth et al. [ |
|
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| Prunus | 4 full genomes sequenced from Prunus sources | Marais et al. [ |
|
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| cherry | One complete genome from sweet cherry | Wang et al. [ |
|
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| Prunus | Ilarvirus RNA2 generic amplicons from 61 trees: new potential ilarviruses; 53 PNRSV-infected sources: genetic strains network designed; incidence and genotyping of Australian ApMV and PDV | Kinoti et al. [ |
|
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| ||||
|
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| sweet cherry, sour cherry | Virome of 9 samples: co-infection of different viruses and co-existence of multiple fabavirus variants | Koloniuk et al. [ |
HTS: High-throughput sequencing; ASGV: Apple stem grooving virus; CNMRV: Cherry necrotic rusty mottle virus; CSD: Citrus sudden death; CTV: Citrus tristeza virus; CYVCV: Citrus yellow vein clearing virus; PNRSV: Prunus necrotic ringspot virus; ApMV: Apple mosaic virus; PDV: Prune dwarf virus.