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Identification and Characterization of a Pear Chlorotic Leaf Spot-Associated Virus, a Novel Emaravirus Associated with a Severe Disease of Pear Trees in China.

Huazhen LiuGuoping WangZuokun YangYanxiang WangZhe ZhangLonghui LiMuhammad WaqasNi HongHuazhen LiuGuoping WangNi HongJian HongJinguo ZhangLei XuLiying Qi
Published in: Plant disease (2020)
Pear chlorotic leaf spot (PCLS) is a recently emerged disease of commercially cultivated sandy pear (Pyrus pyrifolia) trees in central and southern China. By integrating high-throughput sequencing and conventional Sanger sequencing of reverse-transcription (RT)-PCR products, a novel emaravirus infecting pear trees was identified and molecularly characterized. The virus was provisionally named pear chlorotic leaf spot-associated virus (PCLSaV). PCLSaV shows the typical molecular features of members of the genus Emaravirus in the family Fimoviridae. It has a genome composed of at least five negative-sense RNA segments, with each containing a single open reading frame and two complementary 13-nucleotide stretches at the 5' and 3' termini. PCLSaV shows a close phylogenetic relationship with recognized emaraviruses but forms a separate clade. Moreover, double-membrane-bound bodies were observed in PCLSaV-infected tissues and in extracts of PCLSaV-infected leaves. For the first time, our study revealed the profile distribution of viral RNA reads from the RNA-seq libraries of three samples along the RNA1 to RNA5 of an emaravirus. Field surveys combined with specific RT-PCR assays revealed the presence of PCLSaV in almost all PCLS-diseased pear samples, strongly supporting the association of the virus with the PCLS disease. This study revealed the first emaravirus infecting pear trees and its association with a severe pear chlorotic leaf disease.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • rna seq
  • early onset
  • gene expression
  • high throughput
  • sars cov
  • transcription factor
  • working memory
  • single molecule
  • drug induced
  • nucleic acid