Rice black-streaked dwarf virus Genome in China: Diversification, Phylogeny, and Selection

被引:15
|
作者
Zhou, Yu [1 ,2 ]
Zhang, Lin [1 ]
Zhang, Xiaoming [1 ]
Zu, Hongyue [1 ]
Di, Hong [1 ]
Dong, Ling [1 ]
Liu, Xianjun [1 ]
Zeng, Xing [1 ]
Weng, Jianfeng [2 ]
Wang, Zhenhua [1 ]
Li, Xinhai [2 ]
机构
[1] Northeast Agr Univ, Coll Agron, Harbin, Heilongjiang, Peoples R China
[2] Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Crop Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China
关键词
SYNONYMOUS CODON USAGE; MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION; MAIZE; DISEASE; IDENTIFICATION; EXPRESSION; FIJIVIRUS; CROPS; PLANT; BIAS;
D O I
10.1094/PDIS-12-16-1814-RE
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Rice black-streaked dwarf virus (RBSDV), a Fijivirus, causes maize rough dwarf disease and rice black-streaked dwarf disease in the sum-mer maize-growing regions of the Yellow and Huai rivers, respectively, in China. Nevertheless, the diversification and selection of the entire genome from S1 to S10 have not been illuminated. Molecular variation, evolution, conserved regions, and other genomic properties were analyzed in 21 RBSDV isolates from maize (Zea mays L.) and rice (Oryza sativa) hosts sampled from nine geographic locations in China. Low codon adaptation index values ranging from 0.1878 to 0.2918 indicated a low degree of codon-usage bias and low potential expression for all 13 RBSDV open reading frames (ORFs). ORF9-2 showed a stronger effect of codon usage bias than did other ORFs, as the majority of points for this ORF lay close to the standard curve in the Nc plot (the effective number of codons [Nc] versus the frequency of G+C at synonymous third-base positions [GC3]). A 9-bp deletion mutation was detected in the RBSDV genome in the 3' UTR of S8. Nucleotide diversity analysis indicated that the structural proteins of RBSDV, such as S2 and S4, were all more conserved than nonstructural proteins such as S9. Nucleotide diversity (pi) was highest among S9 sequences (0.0656), and was significantly higher than among S4 sequences (0.0225, P < 0.01). The number of conserved regions among the 10 segments varied substantially. The highest number of conserved regions (5) was found in S5; whereas no conserved regions were identified in S9. Nucleotide diversity and the number of conserved regions were independent of the lengths of segments. Nucleotide diversity was also not correlated with the number of conserved regions in segments. Ten recombination events in 21 isolates were found in seven segments with breakpoint positions in UTRs, intergenic spacer regions, and gene coding regions. The number of recombination events was also independent of the lengths of segments. RBSDV isolates from China could be phylogenetically classified into two groups using either 10 segment sequences or the concatenated sequence of S1 through S10, regardless of host or geographical location. The phylogenetic tree generated from pairwise nucleotide identities of individual RBSDV segments such as S9 and S3, with nucleotide identity values of 93.74% and 95.86%, respectively, is similar to the tree constructed from the concatenated sequences of the entire RBSDV genome. The 13 RBSDV ORFs were under negative and purifying selection (Ka/Ks < 1). ORF5-2 was under the greatest selection pressure; however, ORF2, which encodes the core protein of RBSDV, was under the lowest selection pressure.
引用
收藏
页码:1588 / 1596
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Identification of rice black-streaked dwarf fijivirus in maize with rough dwarf disease in China
    S. Fang
    J. Yu
    J. Feng
    C. Han
    D. Li
    Y. Liu
    Archives of Virology, 2001, 146 : 167 - 170
  • [22] Molecular characterisation of segments 1 to 6 of Rice black-streaked dwarf virus from China provides the complete genome
    Zhang, HM
    Chen, JP
    Adams, MJ
    ARCHIVES OF VIROLOGY, 2001, 146 (12) : 2331 - 2339
  • [23] A black-streaked dwarf disease on rice in China is caused by a novel fijivirus
    Zhang, Heng-Mu
    Yang, Jian
    Chen, Jian-Ping
    Adams, M. J.
    ARCHIVES OF VIROLOGY, 2008, 153 (10) : 1893 - 1898
  • [24] SEROLOGICAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MAIZE ROUGH DWARF VIRUS AND RICE BLACK-STREAKED DWARF VIRUS
    LUISONI, E
    LOVISOLO, O
    KITAGAWA, Y
    SHIKATA, E
    VIROLOGY, 1973, 52 (01) : 281 - 283
  • [25] A black-streaked dwarf disease on rice in China is caused by a novel fijivirus
    Heng-Mu Zhang
    Jian Yang
    Jian-Ping Chen
    M. J. Adams
    Archives of Virology, 2008, 153 : 1893 - 1898
  • [26] Nitric Oxide Enhances Rice Resistance to Rice Black-Streaked Dwarf Virus Infection
    Lu, Rongfei
    Liu, Zhiyang
    Shao, Yudong
    Su, Jiuchang
    Li, Xuejuan
    Sun, Feng
    Zhang, Yihua
    Li, Shuo
    Zhang, Yali
    Cui, Jin
    Zhou, Yijun
    Shen, Wenbiao
    Zhou, Tong
    RICE, 2020, 13 (01)
  • [27] Identification of rice black-streaked dwarf fijivirus in maize with rough dwarf disease in China
    Fang, S
    Yu, J
    Feng, J
    Han, C
    Li, D
    Liu, Y
    ARCHIVES OF VIROLOGY, 2001, 146 (01) : 167 - 170
  • [28] Molecular Genetic Analysis and Evolution of Segment 7 in Rice Black-Streaked Dwarf Virus in China
    Zhou, Yu
    Weng, Jianfeng
    Chen, Yanping
    Wu, Jirong
    Meng, Qingchang
    Han, Xiaohua
    Hao, Zhuanfang
    Li, Mingshun
    Yong, Hongjun
    Zhang, Degui
    Zhang, Shihuang
    Li, Xinhai
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (06):
  • [29] Rice grain quality traits impacted by rice black-streaked dwarf virus disease
    Sun, Yue
    Zhang, Jiayuan
    Du, Linlin
    Li, Chenyang
    Lan, Ying
    Zhou, Tong
    Zhou, Xin
    Wei, Baodong
    Lin, Feng
    JOURNAL OF CEREAL SCIENCE, 2024, 118
  • [30] Sequence analysis of the complete genome of rice black-streaked dwarf virus isolated from maize with rough dwarf disease
    Wang, ZH
    Fang, SG
    Xu, JL
    Sun, LY
    Li, DW
    Yu, JL
    VIRUS GENES, 2003, 27 (02) : 163 - 168