Occurrence of a novel mastrevirus in sugarcane germplasm collections in Florida, Guadeloupe and Réunion

  • Wardatou Boukari (Contributor)
  • Ricardo I. Alcalá-Briseño (Creator)
  • Simona Kraberger (Creator)
  • Emmanuel Fernandez (Creator)
  • Denis Filloux (Creator)
  • Jean Heinrich Daugrois (Contributor)
  • Jack C. Comstock (Creator)
  • Jean Michel Lett (Contributor)
  • Darren P. Martin (Creator)
  • Arvind Varsani (Creator)
  • Philippe Roumagnac (Creator)
  • J. E. Polston (Creator)
  • Philippe C. Rott (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Abstract Background In Africa and Asia, sugarcane is the host of at least seven different virus species in the genus Mastrevirus of the family Geminiviridae. However, with the exception of Sugarcane white streak virus in Barbados, no other sugarcane-infecting mastrevirus has been reported in the New World. Conservation and exchange of sugarcane germplasm using stalk cuttings facilitates the spread of sugarcane-infecting viruses. Methods A virion-associated nucleic acids (VANA)-based metagenomics approach was used to detect mastrevirus sequences in 717 sugarcane samples from Florida (USA), Guadeloupe (French West Indies), and Réunion (Mascarene Islands). Contig assembly was performed using CAP3 and sequence searches using BLASTn and BLASTx. Mastrevirus full genomes were enriched from total DNA by rolling circle amplification, cloned and sequenced. Nucleotide and amino acid sequence identities were determined using SDT v1.2. Phylogenetic analyses were conducted using MEGA6 and PHYML3. Results We identified a new sugarcane-infecting mastrevirus in six plants sampled from germplasm collections in Florida and Guadeloupe. Full genome sequences were determined and analyzed for three virus isolates from Florida, and three from Guadeloupe. These six genomes share >88% genome-wide pairwise identity with one another and between 89 and 97% identity with a recently identified mastrevirus (KR150789) from a sugarcane plant sampled in China. Sequences similar to these were also identified in sugarcane plants in Réunion. Conclusions As these virus isolates share
Date made available2017
Publisherfigshare Academic Research System

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