Recombination profiles between Tomato yellow leaf curl virus and Tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus in laboratory and field conditions: evolutionary and taxonomic implications
Author(s) -
Salvatore Davino,
Laura Miozzi,
Stefano Panno,
Luís Rubio,
M. Davino,
Gian Paolo Accotto
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of general virology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.55
H-Index - 167
eISSN - 1465-2099
pISSN - 0022-1317
DOI - 10.1099/vir.0.045773-0
Subject(s) - orfs , biology , leaf curl , genome , recombination , virology , tomato yellow leaf curl virus , virus , geminiviridae , genetics , gene , inoculation , transcription (linguistics) , breakpoint , plant virus , botany , horticulture , open reading frame , begomovirus , chromosomal translocation , peptide sequence , linguistics , philosophy
Tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus and Tomato yellow leaf curl virus have co-existed in Italian tomato crops since 2002 and have reached equilibrium, with plants hosting molecules of both species plus their recombinants being the most frequent case. Recombination events are studied in field samples, as well as in experimental co-infections, when recombinants were detected as early as 45 days following inoculation. In both conditions, recombination breakpoints were essentially absent in regions corresponding to ORFs V2, CP and C4, whereas density was highest in the 3'-terminal portion of ORF C3, next to the region where the two transcription units co-terminate. The vast majority of breakpoints were mapped at antisense ORFs, supporting speculation that the rolling-circle replication mechanism, and the existence of sense and antisense ORFs on the circular genome, may result in clashes between replication and transcription complexes.
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