4.6 Article

Host-specific adaptation drove the coevolution of leek yellow stripe virus and Allium plants

Journal

MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/spectrum.02340-23

Keywords

leek yellow stripe virus; Bayesian phylogeny; host adaptation; virus-host coevolution; RNA silencing suppressor

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Host adaptation is a crucial factor in virus evolution, and this study reveals the host adaptation of Leek yellow stripe virus (LYSV) during its coevolution with Allium plants. LYSV accumulates abundantly in garlic and its relatives, but remains at a low level in leek. The viral P1 and HC-Pro proteins exhibit significant synergism in RSS activity in leek.
Host adaptation plays a crucial role in virus evolution and is a consequence of long-term interactions between virus and host in a complex arms race between host RNA silencing and viral RNA silencing suppressor (RSS) as counterdefense. Leek yellow stripe virus (LYSV), a potyvirus causing yield loss of garlic, infects several species of Allium plants. The unexpected discovery of an interspecific hybrid of garlic, leek, and great-headed (GH) garlic motivated us to explore the host-adaptive evolution of LYSV. Here, using Bayesian phylogenetic comparative methods and a functional assay of viral RSS activity, we show that the evolutionary context of LYSV has been shaped by the host adaptation of the virus during its coevolution with Allium plants. Our phylogenetic analysis revealed that LYSV isolates from leek and their taxonomic relatives (Allium ampeloprasum complex; AAC) formed a distinct monophyletic clade separate from garlic isolates and are likely to be uniquely adapted to AAC. Our comparative studies on viral accumulation indicated that LYSV accumulated at a low level in leek, whereas LYSVs were abundant in other Allium species such as garlic and its relatives. When RSS activity of the viral P1 and HC-Pro of leek LYSV isolate was analyzed, significant synergism in RSS activity between the two proteins was observed in leek but not in other species, suggesting that viral RSS activity may be important for the viral host-specific adaptation. We thus consider that LYSV may have undergone host-specific evolution at least in leek, which must be driven by speciation of its Allium hosts. IMPORTANCE Potyviruses are the most abundant plant RNA viruses and are extremely diversified in terms of their wide host range. Due to frequent host switching during their evolution, host-specific adaptation of potyviruses may have been shaped by numerous host factors. However, any critical determinants for viral host range remain largely unknown, possibly because of the repeated gain and loss of virus infectivity of plants. Leek yellow stripe virus (LYSV) is a species of the genus Potyvirus, which has a relatively narrow host range, generally limited to hosts in the genus Allium. Our investigations on leek and leek relatives (Allium ampeloprasum complex), which must have been generated through interspecies hybridization, revealed that LYSV accumulation remained low in leek as a result of viral host adaptation in competition with host resistance such as RNA silencing. This study presents LYSV as an ideal model to study the process of host-adaptive evolution and virus-host coevolution.

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