4.5 Article

Reassortment of Infectious Clones of Radish Mosaic Virus Shows that Systemic Necrosis in Nicotiana benthamiana Is Determined by RNA1

Journal

PHYTOPATHOLOGY
Volume 112, Issue 6, Pages 1361-1372

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PHYTO-04-21-0172-R

Keywords

comovirus; pathogenicity; Raphanus; symptom severity; virus evolution

Categories

Funding

  1. New Breeding Technologies Development Program, Rural Development Administration, Republic of Korea [PJ01477603]

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The study found that radish mosaic virus isolates from different regions in Korea have distinct sequences and pathogenicity, causing different symptoms in tobacco and radish plants. The accumulation of RNA2 is correlated with the necrosis-inducing ability of the virus, and its level mostly depends on the origin of RNA1. Recombination and reassortment events have played important roles in the evolution of the virus isolates. Additionally, the Korean isolates were found to also infect Chinese cabbage, posing a threat to the crop and causing potential economic losses.
Three infectious clones of radish mosaic virus (RaMV) were generated from isolates collected in mainland Korea (RaMV-Gg) and Jeju Island (RaMV-Aa and RaMV-Bb). These isolates differed in sequences and pathogenicity. Examination of the wild-type isolates and reassortants between the genomic RNA1 and RNA2 of these three isolates revealed that severe symptoms were associated with RNA1 of isolates Aa or Gg causing systemic necrosis in Nicotiana benthamiana, or with RNA1 of isolate Bb for induction of veinal necrosis and severe mosaic symptoms in radish. Reverse transcription, followed by quantitative real-time PCR (Q-RT-PCR), results from infected N. benthamiana confirmed that viral RNA2 accumulation level was correlated to RaMV necrosis-inducing ability, and that the RNA2 accumulation level was mostly dependent on the origin of RNA1. However, in radish, Q-RT-PCR results showed more similar viral RNA2 accumulation levels regardless of the ability of the isolate to induce necrosis. Phylogenetic analysis of genomic RNAs sequence including previously characterized isolates from North America, Europe, and Asia suggest possible recombination within RNA1, while analysis of concatenated RNA1+RNA2 sequences indicates that reassortment of RNA1 and RNA2 has been more important in the evolution of RaMV isolates than recombination. Korean isolate Aa is a potential reassortant between isolates RaMV-J and RaMV-TW, while isolate Bb might have evolved from reassortment between isolates RaMV-CA and RaMV-J. The Korean isolates were shown to also be able to infect Chinese cabbage, raising concerns that RaMV may spread from radish fields to the Chinese cabbage crop in Korea, causing further economic losses.

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