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Complete genome sequence of a Moroccan isolate of cereal chlorotic mottle virus.

Robert A Alvarez-QuintoBenham E LockhartJoana SerranoSamuel C GrinsteadDimitre Mollov
Published in: Archives of virology (2022)
Cereal chlorotic mottle virus (CCMoV) is a cicadellid-transmitted plant rhabdovirus associated with chlorotic and necrotic streaks on several gramineous hosts and weeds. The virus was initially described in 1979 in Australia, but its genome has never been sequenced. In this study, the complete genome sequence of a Moroccan isolate of CCMoV was generated by high-throughput sequencing from infected oat leaves (Avena sativa). The genome is 13,800 nt long, containing seven open reading frames (ORFs) arranged in the canonical organization of rhabdoviruses: 3'-nucleocapsid (N), phosphoprotein (P), unknown protein (p3), unknown protein (p4), matrix (M), glycoprotein (G), viral polymerase (L)-5'. Pairwise analysis showed that maize fine streak virus (MFSV, genus Gammanucleorhabdovirus) was the closest relative. The amino acid identity values between homologous proteins from CCMoV and MFSV are as follows: 59.27% (N), 36.7% (P), 24% (P3), 62% (P4), 43.70% (M), 49.15% (G), 60.93% (L). Based on its phylogenetic relationship and analogous genome architecture, CCMoV should be assigned as member of the genus Gammanucleorhabdovirus. The low sequence similarity observed between CCMoV and MFSV suggests that CCMoV is a member of a distinct virus species.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • genome wide
  • dna damage
  • gene expression
  • high throughput sequencing
  • minimally invasive
  • air pollution
  • dna repair
  • oxidative stress
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus