Sixty years after the first description: Genome sequence and biological characterization of European wheat striate mosaic virus infecting cereal crops
Sõmera, Merike | Kvarnheden, Anders | Desbiez, Cecile | Blystad, Dag-Ragnar | Sooväli, Pille | Kundu, Jiban Kumar | Gantsovski, Mark | Nygren, Jim | Lecoq, Hervé | Verdin, Eric | Spetz, Carl | Tamisier, Lucie | Truve, Erkki | Massart, Sébastien | Tallinn University of Technology (TalTech) | Department of Plant Biology ; Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences = Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet (SLU) | Institute of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences ; Estonian University of Life Sciences (EMU) | Unité de Pathologie Végétale (PV) ; Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE) | Norsk institutt for bioøkonomi=Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO) | Estonian Crop Research Institute ; Partenaires INRAE | Crop research institute | Université de Liège = University of Liège = Universiteit van Luik = Universität Lüttich (ULiège) | Estonian Ministry of Education and Research Institutional research grant number IUT 19; Swedish Institute senior researcher scholarship; COST Action FA1407 (DIVAS) STSM grants; grant number MZe RO0418
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Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]Английский. High throughput sequencing technologies were used to identify plant viruses in cereal samples surveyed from 2012 to 2017. Fifteen genome sequences of a tenuivirus infecting wheat, oats and spelt in Estonia, Norway and Sweden were identified and characterized. Like most tenuiviruses, the genome of this tenuivirus contains four genomic segments. The isolates found from different countries shared at least 92% nucleotide sequence identity at the genome level. The planthopper <em>Javesella pellucida</em> was identified as a vector of the virus. Laboratory transmission tests using this vector indicated that wheat, oats, barley, rye and triticale, but none of the tested pasture grass species (<em>Alopecurus pratensis, Dactylis glomerata, Festuca rubra, Lolium multiflorum, Phleum pratense, Poa pratensis</em>) are susceptible. Taking into account the vector and host range data, the tenuivirus we have found most probably represents European wheat striate mosaic virus first identified about sixty years ago. Interestingly, whereas we were not able to infect any of the tested cereal species mechanically,<em> Nicotiana benthamiana</em> was infected via mechanical inoculation in laboratory conditions, displaying symptoms of yellow spots and vein clearing evolving into necrosis, eventually leading to plant death. Surprisingly, one of the virus genome segments (RNA2) encoding both a putative host systemic movement enhancer protein and a putative vector transmission factor was not detected in N. benthamiana after several passages even though systemic infection was observed, raising fundamental questions about the role of this segment in the systemic spread in several hosts.
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