| Literature DB >> 35890008 |
Muhammad Mubin1, Arzoo Shabbir1, Nazia Nahid2, Iram Liaqat3, Muhammad Hassan1, Nada H Aljarba4, Ahmed Al Qahtani5,6, Claude M Fauquet7, Jian Ye8, Muhammad Shah Nawaz-Ul-Rehman1.
Abstract
Alphasatellites are small single-stranded circular DNA molecules associated with geminiviruses and nanoviruses. In this study, a meta-analysis of known alphasatellites isolated from the genus Gossypium (cotton) over the last two decades was performed. The phylogenetic and pairwise sequence identity analysis suggested that cotton-infecting begomoviruses were associated with at least 12 different alphasatellites globally. Three out of twelve alphasatellite were associated with cotton leaf curl geminiviruses but were not isolated from cotton plants. The cotton leaf curl Multan alphasatellite, which was initially isolated from cotton, has now been reported in several plant species, including monocot plants such as sugarcane. Our recombination analysis suggested that four alphasatellites, namely cotton leaf curl Lucknow alphasatellites, cotton leaf curl Multan alphasatellites, Ageratum yellow vein Indian alphasatellites and Ageratum enation alphasatellites, evolved through recombination. Additionally, high genetic variability was detected among the cotton-infecting alphasatellites at the genome level. The nucleotide substitution rate for the replication protein of alphasatellites (alpha-Rep) was estimated to be relatively high (~1.56 × 10-3). However, unlike other begomoviruses and satellites, the first codon position of alpha-Rep rapidly changed compared to the second and third codon positions. This study highlights the biodiversity and recombination of alphasatellites associated with the leaf curl diseases of cotton crops.Entities:
Keywords: alphasatellite; begomoviruses; cotton; diversity; epidemic; genetic recombination
Year: 2022 PMID: 35890008 PMCID: PMC9319557 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11070763
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Host species mentioned in the GenBank data and classification of geminialphasatellites associated with cotton leaf curl geminiviruses around the world.
| Ser# | Alphasatellite | Geographical Distribution | Host Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ageyesisatellite | |||
| 1 | CLCuSAA | Saudi Arabia | Okra |
| 2 | AYVSGA | Pakistan | Cotton |
| Clecrusatellite | |||
| 3 | CrYVMA | Pakistan | Cotton, croton, tomato |
| Colecusatellite | |||
| 4 | AEA | Pakistan | Cotton, okra, capsicum, luffa, tomato, sesbinia, hibiscus, sugar cane, jasminum ageratum, hot pepper, populus alba, radish, papaya, poppy, croton, synedrella, qatal booti, mungbean |
| 5 | AYVINA | India | Ageratum, cotton, parthenium, amaranthus, radish |
| 6 | CLCEA | Egypt | Cotton, ageratum |
| 7 | CLCGezA | Cameroon | Okra, tobacco, hollyhock, bamako, sida |
| 8 | CLCBTA | Botswana | Sida |
| 9 | CLCLucA | India | Okra, cotton |
| 10 | CLCMulA | Pakistan | Cotton, okra, tomato, ipomoea, cyamopsis, saccharum, spinacia, luffa, wheat |
| 11 | GDarSLA | India | Cotton, alcea, luffa |
| Pakistan | |||
| Gosmusatellite | |||
| 12 | GMusSLA | India | Cotton, luffa, okra, papaya, alcea |
| Pakistan | |||
Nine different alphasatellites—AYVSGA, CrYVMA, AEA, AYVINA, CLCEA, CLCLucA, CLCMulA, GDarSLA and GMusSLA—were considered bona fide alphasatellites, as they were isolated from cotton. CLCSAA, CLCGezA and CLCBTA have never been found in cotton plants; therefore, we considered them as putative cotton-infecting alphasatellites. Eight out of twelve alphasatellites were present on the Indian subcontinent. The accession numbers of each alphasatellite/host are shown in Supplementary Figure S1.
Nucleotide identity percentages of 12 geminialphasatellites isolated in association with cotton leaf curl geminiviruses.
| Alphasat-EllitesName | CLCMulA(Rep) | AEA | CLCLucA | AYVINA | GDarSLA | CLCEA | CrYVMA | AYVSGA | GMusSLA | CLCGezA | CLCBTA | CLCSAA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLCMulA | 84–100 | |||||||||||
| AEA | 76–90 | 83–100 | ||||||||||
| CLCLucA | 78–88 | 82–86 | 93–100 | |||||||||
| AYVINA | 81–88 | 80–88 | 82–83 | 95–100 | ||||||||
| GDarSLA | 75–90 | 76–87 | 77–81 | 78–84 | 88–100 | |||||||
| CLCuEA | 73–79 | 74–88 | 74–75 | 77–78 | 73–77 | 100 | ||||||
| CrYVMA | 58–63 | 59–63 | 59–62 | 61–62 | 59–64 | 60–60 | 95–100 | |||||
| AYVSGA | 58–62 | 58–63 | 58–60 | 60–62 | 57–63 | 59–61 | 61–63 | 92–100 | ||||
| GMusSLA | 64–73 | 63–71 | 68–72 | 65–71 | 62–70 | 65–69 | 56–60 | 58–63 | 84–100 | |||
| CLCGezA | 75–81 | 76–81 | 76–78 | 78–80 | 73–79 | 75–79 | 59–63 | 58–62 | 62–69 | 95–100 | ||
| CLCBTA | 75–79 | 75–79 | 77 | 76–77 | 72–77 | 76 | 62–63 | 59–61 | 64–69 | 80–82 | 100 | |
| CLCSAA | 57–63 | 58–63 | 59–60 | 59–62 | 60–64 | 58–59 | 61–62 | 77–79 | 59–63 | 58–61 | 59 | 100 |
The nucleotide identity percentages ranged among the alphasatellites. The values for the full-length genomes of alphasatellites showed a wider range of identity percentages due to recombination, deletions or insertions, while the identity percentage values for the alpha-Rep genes (in parentheses) showed a higher level of similarity.
Figure 1Maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree of alphasatellites isolated from cotton. The numbers at different nodes represent the 1000 bootstrap replication values. Nine different alphasatellites (1)–(9) were reported in cotton crop from around the world, while three alphasatellites (i, ii and iii) were associated only with cotton leaf curl geminiviruses and were not identified in cotton. Panel (A) represents the full-length molecules representative of those shown in Supplementary Figure S1, while panel (B) shows the phylogenetic tree of the Rep genes used in panel (A). Different clusters representing each strain of CLCMulA are indicated with lowercase letters (a–i) and a rectangular box. Each alphasatellite is represented with a unique color. Members of the genera Colecusatellite, Gosmusatellite, Clecrusatellite and Ageyesisatellite infect cotton crops around the world.
Figure 2Pairwise sequence comparisons of full-length alphasatellites and their Rep genes. The PASC values of the full-length molecules showed higher levels of nucleotide diversity, even below the species level previously described for alphasatellites (88%). However, the PASC values of the Rep gene were in agreement with the species criteria for alphasatellites. The shift in PASC comparisons was due to recombination in the A-rich or common region of the alphasatellites.
Nucleotide substitution rate estimates for cotton leaf curl Multan alphasatellites.
| Satellite/Virus Acronym | Demographic/Clock Model | Mean Rate | CP1 Mutation Rate | CP2 Mutation Rate | CP3 Mutation Rate | No. of Taxa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GDarSLA-Rep * | BSP/Relaxed | 2.13 × 10−3 | 1.4 | 0.765 | 0.831 | 63 |
| CLCMulB-βC1 * | BSP/Relaxed | 3.51 × 10−3 | 0.85 | 0.73 | 1.43 | 39 |
| CLCMulA-Rep | GTR/Relaxed | 1.56 × 10−3 | 1.981 | 0.516 | 0.501 | 36 |
| ChiLCA-Rep ** | - | 2.25 × 10−3 | - | - | - | - |
* Nawaz-ul-Rehman et al., 2012; ** Kumar et al., 2017.