4.4 Article

Polerovirus genomic variation

Journal

VIRUS EVOLUTION
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ve/veab102

Keywords

CP-RT; genome variation; genomic analysis; polerovirus; P0; VPg

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01GM120108]
  2. Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station
  3. Hatch Act through the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [1007272]
  4. National Institutes of Health under the Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [1 T32 AI125207]

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Poleroviruses, with a genome consisting of single-strand positive RNA, infect a wide range of plants through transmission by aphids. Mutational robustness and structural flexibility are crucial for virus functionality in diverse host plants and vectors. Variability and selection analyses reveal that genes coding for P0 and the CP-RT domain are highly variable and under positive selection, mediating adaptation to hosts and vectors.
The polerovirus (family Solemoviridae, genus Polerovirus) genome consists of single-, positive-strand RNA organized in overlapping open reading frames (ORFs) that, in addition to others, code for protein 0 (P0, a gene silencing suppressor), a coat protein (CP, ORF3), and a read-through domain (ORF5) that is fused to the CP to form a CP-read-through (RT) protein. The genus Polerovirus contains twenty-six virus species that infect a wide variety of plants from cereals to cucurbits, to peppers. Poleroviruses are transmitted by a wide range of aphid species in the genera Rhopalosiphum, Stiobion, Aphis, and Myzus. Aphid transmission is mediated both by the CP and by the CP-RT. In viruses, mutational robustness and structural flexibility are necessary for maintaining functionality in genetically diverse sets of host plants and vectors. Under this scenario, within a virus genome, mutations preferentially accumulate in areas that are determinants of host adaptation or vector transmission. In this study, we profiled genomic variation in poleroviruses. Consistent with their multifunctional nature, single-nucleotide variation and selection analyses showed that ORFs coding for P0 and the read-through domain within the CP-RT are the most variable and contain the highest frequency of sites under positive selection. An order/disorder analysis showed that protein P0 is not disordered. In contrast, proteins CP-RT and virus protein genome-linked (VPg) contain areas of disorder. Disorder is a property of multifunctional proteins with multiple interaction partners. The results described here suggest that using contrasting mechanisms, P0, VPg, and CP-RT mediate adaptation to host plants and to vectors and are contributors to the broad host and vector range of poleroviruses. Profiling genetic variation across the polerovirus genome has practical applications in diagnostics, breeding for resistance, and identification of susceptibility genes and contributes to our understanding of virus interactions with their host, vectors, and environment.

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