4.7 Article

The Temporal and Geographical Dynamics of Potato Virus Y Diversity in Russia

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241914833

Keywords

plant RNA virus; Potyvirus; Solanum tuberosum; plant-virus interactions; virus evolution; phylogeography; RNA virus recombination; virus transmission

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Potato virus Y (PVY) is an important viral pathogen of potato with genetic variants and geographic distributions influenced by environmental factors, aphid vectors, and reservoir plants. In this study, we used high-throughput sequencing to investigate PVY populations transmitted to potato plants by aphids in different climate zones of Russia. We found significant differences in PVY diversity between regions, suggesting the impact of environmental factors on PVY genetics.
Potato virus Y, an important viral pathogen of potato, has several genetic variants and geographic distributions which could be affected by environmental factors, aphid vectors, and reservoir plants. PVY is transmitted to virus-free potato plants by aphids and passed on to the next vegetative generations through tubers, but the effects of tuber transmission in PVY is largely unknown. By using high-throughput sequencing, we investigated PVY populations transmitted to potato plants by aphids in different climate zones of Russia, namely the Moscow and Astrakhan regions. We analyzed sprouts from the tubers produced by field-infected plants to investigate the impact of tuber transmission on PVY genetics. We found a significantly higher diversity of PVY isolates in the Astrakhan region, where winters are shorter and milder and summers are warmer compared to the Moscow region. While five PVY types, NTNa, NTNb, N:O, N-Wi, and SYR-I, were present in both regions, SYRI-II, SYRI-III, and 261-4 were only found in the Astrakhan region. All these recombinants were composed of the genome sections derived from PVY types O and N, but no full-length sequences of such types were present. The composition of the PVY variants in the tuber sprouts was not always the same as in their parental plants, suggesting that tuber transmission impacts PVY genetics.

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