4.6 Article

Genomic High Plains Wheat Mosaic Virus Sequences from Australia: Their Phylogenetics and Evidence for Emaravirus Recombination and Reassortment

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v15020401

Keywords

wheat; virus disease; High Plains wheat mosaic virus; Australia; high-throughput sequencing; phylogenetics; recombination; reassortment; biosecurity

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High Plains wheat mosaic virus (HPWMoV) is a serious disease affecting wheat in major wheat-growing regions worldwide. This study reports the complete or partial genomic sequences of five HPWMoV isolates from Australian wheat samples. Phylogenetic analysis revealed the presence of two lineages, L1 and L2, with L1 containing isolates from the North American Great Plains Region and L2 consisting of isolates from Australia and the Great Plains Region. Recombination in the nucleocapsid gene was unexpectedly observed in a quarter of the L2B isolates. The study also identified similarities between HPWMoV and other emaraviruses in certain genomic segments.
High Plains wheat mosaic virus (HPWMoV) causes a serious disease in major wheat-growing regions worldwide. We report here the complete or partial genomic sequences of five HPWMoV isolates from Australian wheat samples. Phylogenetic analysis of the nucleotide sequences of the eight genomic segments of these five isolates together with others from Genbank found all eight genes formed two lineages, L1 and L2. L1 contained a single isolate from Colorado in the North American Great Plains Region (GPR), and L2 had two unresolved clusters, A and B, of isolates from Australia and the GPR. A quarter of the L2B isolate sequences of the nucleocapsid gene (RNA3) were recombinant, which is unexpected as little evidence of recombination exists in viruses with negative single-stranded RNA genomes. Phylogenies calculated from the amino acid sequences of HPWMoV's RNA-dependent RNA-polymerase (RNA1), glycoprotein (RNA2), and nucleocapsid protein (RNA3) showed they were closest to those of Palo Verde broom virus. However, its movement protein (RNA4) was closer to those of Ti ringspot-associated and common oak ringspot-associated viruses, indicating the RNA4 segments of their ancestors reassorted to produce the current emaraviruses. To avoid increased yield losses from co-infection, biosecurity measures are advised to avoid HPWMoV introduction to countries where wheat streak mosaic virus already occurs.

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