The proposed new species, cacao red vein virus, and three previously recognized badnavirus species are associated with cacao swollen shoot disease

Abstract Background Cacao swollen shoot virus (CSSV), Cacao swollen shoot CD virus (CSSCDV), and Cacao swollen shoot Togo A virus (CSSTAV) cause cacao swollen shoot disease (CSSD) in West Africa. During 2000–2003, leaf and shoot-swelling symptoms and rapid tree death were observed in cacao in Cote d...

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Main Authors: Nomatter Chingandu, Koffie Kouakou, Romain Aka, George Ameyaw, Osman A. Gutierrez, Hans-Werner Herrmann, Judith K. Brown
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-10-01
Series:Virology Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12985-017-0866-6
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spelling doaj-31b8f2de6f5b4a61abc3291fac065d7f2020-11-25T00:13:39ZengBMCVirology Journal1743-422X2017-10-0114111410.1186/s12985-017-0866-6The proposed new species, cacao red vein virus, and three previously recognized badnavirus species are associated with cacao swollen shoot diseaseNomatter Chingandu0Koffie Kouakou1Romain Aka2George Ameyaw3Osman A. Gutierrez4Hans-Werner Herrmann5Judith K. Brown6School of Plant Sciences, University of ArizonaCentre National de Recherche Agronomique (CNRA), Programme CacaoCentre National de Recherche Agronomique (CNRA), Programme CacaoCocoa Research Institute of GhanaUSDA-ARS Subtropical Horticultural Research StationSchool of Plant Sciences, University of ArizonaSchool of Plant Sciences, University of ArizonaAbstract Background Cacao swollen shoot virus (CSSV), Cacao swollen shoot CD virus (CSSCDV), and Cacao swollen shoot Togo A virus (CSSTAV) cause cacao swollen shoot disease (CSSD) in West Africa. During 2000–2003, leaf and shoot-swelling symptoms and rapid tree death were observed in cacao in Cote d’Ivoire and Ghana. Molecular tests showed positive infection in only ~50–60% of symptomatic trees, suggesting the possible emergence of an unknown badnavirus. Methods The DNA virome was determined from symptomatic cacao samples using Illumina-Hi Seq, and sequence accuracy was verified by Sanger sequencing. The resultant 14, and seven previously known, full-length badnaviral genomic and RT-RNase H sequences were analyzed by pairwise distance analysis to resolve species relationships, and by Maximum likelihood (ML) to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships. The viral coding and non-coding sequences, genome organization, and predicted conserved protein domains (CPDs) were identified and characterized at the species level. Results The 21 CSSD-badnaviral genomes and RT-RNase H sequences shared 70–100% and 72–100% identity, respectively. The RT-RNase H analysis predicted four species, based on an ≥80% species cutoff. The ML genome sequence tree resolved three well-supported clades, with ≥70% bootstrap, whereas, the RT-RNase H phylogeny was poorly resolved, however, both trees grouped CSSD isolates within one large clade, including the newly discovered Cacao red vein virus (CRVV) proposed species. The genome arrangement of the four species consists of four, five, or six predicted open reading frames (ORFs), and the CPDs have similar architectures. By comparison, two New World cacao-infecting badnaviruses encode four ORFs, and harbor CPDs like the West African species. Conclusions Three previously recognized West African cacao-infecting badnaviral species were identified, and a fourth, previously unidentified species, CRVV, is described for the first time. The CRVV is a suspect causal agent of the rapid decline phenotype, however Koch’s Postulates have not been proven. To reconcile viral evolutionary with epidemiology considerations, more detailed information about CSSD-genomic variability is essential. Also, the functional basis for the multiple genome arrangements and subtly distinct CPD architectures among cacao-infecting badnaviruses is poorly understood. New knowledge about functional relationships may help explain the diverse symptomatologies observed in affected cacao trees.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12985-017-0866-6CaulimoviridaeCacao virusDouble-stranded DNA plant virusMealybug-transmitted virusPararetrovirus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nomatter Chingandu
Koffie Kouakou
Romain Aka
George Ameyaw
Osman A. Gutierrez
Hans-Werner Herrmann
Judith K. Brown
spellingShingle Nomatter Chingandu
Koffie Kouakou
Romain Aka
George Ameyaw
Osman A. Gutierrez
Hans-Werner Herrmann
Judith K. Brown
The proposed new species, cacao red vein virus, and three previously recognized badnavirus species are associated with cacao swollen shoot disease
Virology Journal
Caulimoviridae
Cacao virus
Double-stranded DNA plant virus
Mealybug-transmitted virus
Pararetrovirus
author_facet Nomatter Chingandu
Koffie Kouakou
Romain Aka
George Ameyaw
Osman A. Gutierrez
Hans-Werner Herrmann
Judith K. Brown
author_sort Nomatter Chingandu
title The proposed new species, cacao red vein virus, and three previously recognized badnavirus species are associated with cacao swollen shoot disease
title_short The proposed new species, cacao red vein virus, and three previously recognized badnavirus species are associated with cacao swollen shoot disease
title_full The proposed new species, cacao red vein virus, and three previously recognized badnavirus species are associated with cacao swollen shoot disease
title_fullStr The proposed new species, cacao red vein virus, and three previously recognized badnavirus species are associated with cacao swollen shoot disease
title_full_unstemmed The proposed new species, cacao red vein virus, and three previously recognized badnavirus species are associated with cacao swollen shoot disease
title_sort proposed new species, cacao red vein virus, and three previously recognized badnavirus species are associated with cacao swollen shoot disease
publisher BMC
series Virology Journal
issn 1743-422X
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Abstract Background Cacao swollen shoot virus (CSSV), Cacao swollen shoot CD virus (CSSCDV), and Cacao swollen shoot Togo A virus (CSSTAV) cause cacao swollen shoot disease (CSSD) in West Africa. During 2000–2003, leaf and shoot-swelling symptoms and rapid tree death were observed in cacao in Cote d’Ivoire and Ghana. Molecular tests showed positive infection in only ~50–60% of symptomatic trees, suggesting the possible emergence of an unknown badnavirus. Methods The DNA virome was determined from symptomatic cacao samples using Illumina-Hi Seq, and sequence accuracy was verified by Sanger sequencing. The resultant 14, and seven previously known, full-length badnaviral genomic and RT-RNase H sequences were analyzed by pairwise distance analysis to resolve species relationships, and by Maximum likelihood (ML) to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships. The viral coding and non-coding sequences, genome organization, and predicted conserved protein domains (CPDs) were identified and characterized at the species level. Results The 21 CSSD-badnaviral genomes and RT-RNase H sequences shared 70–100% and 72–100% identity, respectively. The RT-RNase H analysis predicted four species, based on an ≥80% species cutoff. The ML genome sequence tree resolved three well-supported clades, with ≥70% bootstrap, whereas, the RT-RNase H phylogeny was poorly resolved, however, both trees grouped CSSD isolates within one large clade, including the newly discovered Cacao red vein virus (CRVV) proposed species. The genome arrangement of the four species consists of four, five, or six predicted open reading frames (ORFs), and the CPDs have similar architectures. By comparison, two New World cacao-infecting badnaviruses encode four ORFs, and harbor CPDs like the West African species. Conclusions Three previously recognized West African cacao-infecting badnaviral species were identified, and a fourth, previously unidentified species, CRVV, is described for the first time. The CRVV is a suspect causal agent of the rapid decline phenotype, however Koch’s Postulates have not been proven. To reconcile viral evolutionary with epidemiology considerations, more detailed information about CSSD-genomic variability is essential. Also, the functional basis for the multiple genome arrangements and subtly distinct CPD architectures among cacao-infecting badnaviruses is poorly understood. New knowledge about functional relationships may help explain the diverse symptomatologies observed in affected cacao trees.
topic Caulimoviridae
Cacao virus
Double-stranded DNA plant virus
Mealybug-transmitted virus
Pararetrovirus
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12985-017-0866-6
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