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Molecular characterization of a new badnavirus associated with streak symptoms on enset ( Ensete ventricosum , Musaceae )
Author(s) -
Abraham Adane,
Winter Stephan,
RichertPöggeler Katja R.,
Menzel Wulf
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of phytopathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.53
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1439-0434
pISSN - 0931-1785
DOI - 10.1111/jph.12719
Subject(s) - musaceae , biology , genome , virus , virology , polymerase chain reaction , rolling circle replication , nucleic acid sequence , plant virus , sequence analysis , dna , genetics , botany , gene , dna polymerase
Electron microscopy of leaf samples displaying streak symptoms from enset ( Ensete ventricosum ), a banana‐like plant widely cultivated in Ethiopia, showed the presence of bacilliform shaped virions as known for badnaviruses. DNA extracts subjected to rolling circle amplification ( RCA ), polymerase chain reaction ( PCR ) and cloning and sequence analysis revealed that the virus has a circular double‐stranded DNA genome of 7,163 nucleotides encoding predicted proteins of 21.5 kD a, 14.5 kD a and 202.5 kD a, a genome organization known for badnaviruses. The virus is phylogenetically most closely related to Sugarcane bacilliform Guadeloupe D virus with a nucleotide sequence identity of 77.2% at the conserved RT / RN ase‐H region and 73.6% for the whole genome. Following the current species demarcation criteria, the virus should be considered as an isolate of a new species in the genus Badnavirus for which the name Enset leaf streak virus ( ELSV ) is suggested. Leaf samples from enset and banana were screened using virus‐specific primers, and ELSV was detected in six of 40 enset but not found in any of 61 banana samples. On the other hand, Banana streak OL virus ( BSOLV ) was detected from the majority (60%) of symptomatic banana samples but not from enset samples. This paper reports the first full‐genome sequence of a putative new badnavirus species infecting plants in the genus Ensete . In addition, this is the first report of the occurrence of BSOLV in Ethiopia.