Literature DB >> 30677338

Rice black-streaked dwarf virus Genome in China: Diversification, Phylogeny, and Selection.

Yu Zhou1, Lin Zhang2, Xiaoming Zhang2, Hongyue Zu2, Hong Di2, Ling Dong2, Xianjun Liu2, Xing Zeng2, Jianfeng Weng3, Zhenhua Wang2, Xinhai Li3.   

Abstract

Rice black-streaked dwarf virus (RBSDV), a Fijivirus, causes maize rough dwarf disease and rice black-streaked dwarf disease in the summer maize-growing regions of the Yellow and Huai rivers, respectively, in China. Nevertheless, the diversification and selection of the entire genome from S1 to S10 have not been illuminated. Molecular variation, evolution, conserved regions, and other genomic properties were analyzed in 21 RBSDV isolates from maize (Zea mays L.) and rice (Oryza sativa) hosts sampled from nine geographic locations in China. Low codon adaptation index values ranging from 0.1878 to 0.2918 indicated a low degree of codon-usage bias and low potential expression for all 13 RBSDV open reading frames (ORFs). ORF9-2 showed a stronger effect of codon usage bias than did other ORFs, as the majority of points for this ORF lay close to the standard curve in the Nc plot (the effective number of codons [Nc] versus the frequency of G+C at synonymous third-base positions [GC3]). A 9-bp deletion mutation was detected in the RBSDV genome in the 3' UTR of S8. Nucleotide diversity analysis indicated that the structural proteins of RBSDV, such as S2 and S4, were all more conserved than nonstructural proteins such as S9. Nucleotide diversity (π) was highest among S9 sequences (0.0656), and was significantly higher than among S4 sequences (0.0225, P < 0.01). The number of conserved regions among the 10 segments varied substantially. The highest number of conserved regions (5) was found in S5, whereas no conserved regions were identified in S9. Nucleotide diversity and the number of conserved regions were independent of the lengths of segments. Nucleotide diversity was also not correlated with the number of conserved regions in segments. Ten recombination events in 21 isolates were found in seven segments with breakpoint positions in UTRs, intergenic spacer regions, and gene coding regions. The number of recombination events was also independent of the lengths of segments. RBSDV isolates from China could be phylogenetically classified into two groups using either 10 segment sequences or the concatenated sequence of S1 through S10, regardless of host or geographical location. The phylogenetic tree generated from pairwise nucleotide identities of individual RBSDV segments such as S9 and S3, with nucleotide identity values of 93.74% and 95.86%, respectively, is similar to the tree constructed from the concatenated sequences of the entire RBSDV genome. The 13 RBSDV ORFs were under negative and purifying selection (Ka/Ks < 1). ORF5-2 was under the greatest selection pressure; however, ORF2, which encodes the core protein of RBSDV, was under the lowest selection pressure.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 30677338     DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-12-16-1814-RE

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Dis        ISSN: 0191-2917            Impact factor:   4.438


  6 in total

Review 1.  Evolution and host adaptability of plant RNA viruses: Research insights on compositional biases.

Authors:  Zhen He; Lang Qin; Xiaowei Xu; Shiwen Ding
Journal:  Comput Struct Biotechnol J       Date:  2022-05-17       Impact factor: 6.155

2.  Molecular characteristics of segment 5, a unique fragment encoding two partially overlapping ORFs in the genome of rice black-streaked dwarf virus.

Authors:  Hongyue Zu; Hong Zhang; Minhao Yao; Jiayue Zhang; Hong Di; Lin Zhang; Ling Dong; Zhenhua Wang; Yu Zhou
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-11-07       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  A field-deployable method for single and multiplex detection of DNA or RNA from pathogens using Cas12 and Cas13.

Authors:  Lina Li; Canxing Duan; Jianfeng Weng; Xiantao Qi; Changlin Liu; Xinhai Li; Jinjie Zhu; Chuanxiao Xie
Journal:  Sci China Life Sci       Date:  2021-12-23       Impact factor: 10.372

4.  Rice black-streaked dwarf virus: From multiparty interactions among plant-virus-vector to intermittent epidemics.

Authors:  Nan Wu; Lu Zhang; Yingdang Ren; Xifeng Wang
Journal:  Mol Plant Pathol       Date:  2020-06-08       Impact factor: 5.663

5.  Genome Editing of Rice eIF4G Loci Confers Partial Resistance to Rice Black-Streaked Dwarf Virus.

Authors:  Wei Wang; Shuhui Ma; Peng Hu; Yinghua Ji; Feng Sun
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2021-10-18       Impact factor: 5.048

6.  ARGONAUTE 2 increases rice susceptibility to rice black-streaked dwarf virus infection by epigenetically regulating HEXOKINASE 1 expression.

Authors:  Zhaoyun Wang; Dongyue Chen; Feng Sun; Wei Guo; Wei Wang; Xuejuan Li; Ying Lan; Linlin Du; Shuo Li; Yongjian Fan; Yijun Zhou; Hongwei Zhao; Tong Zhou
Journal:  Mol Plant Pathol       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 5.663

  6 in total

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