Biotic, Molecular, and Phylogenetic Characterization of Bean Calico Mosaic Virus, a Distinct Begomovirus Species with Affiliation in the Squash Leaf Curl Virus Cluster
Open Access
- 1 April 1999
- journal article
- Published by Scientific Societies in Phytopathology®
- Vol. 89 (4) , 273-280
- https://doi.org/10.1094/phyto.1999.89.4.273
Abstract
Bean calico mosaic virus (BCMoV), a whitefly-transmitted geminivirus from Sonora, Mexico, was purified, and the genome components were cloned and sequenced. Purified viral fractions and cloned genome components were infectious by biolistic inoculation to bean, completing Koch's postulates for both. The B biotype of the whitefly Bemisia tabaci efficiently transmitted both native virus and progeny virus derived from cloned DNA inoculum. Host ranges of native virus and of progeny virus derived from cloned DNA were identical based upon whitefly and biolistic mediated transmission, respectively. BCMoV has a relatively wide experimental host range among begomoviruses known to infect bean, encompassing genera and species within the Fabaceae, Malvaceae, and Solanaceae. BCMoV has a bipartite genome, as do other New World begomoviruses. BCMoV DNA-A shared highest nucleotide sequence identities with squash leaf curl virus-E strain (SLCV-E) and cabbage leaf curl virus (CaLCV) at 80.1 and 80.7%, respectively. BCMoV DNA-B shared highest nucleotide sequence identity with SLCV-E at 70.7%. The common region (CR) sequences of BCMoV and SLCV-E are 73 to 76% identical; however, modular cis-acting elements within the CR involved in replication origin function and recognition are 100% conserved. Phy-logenetic analysis indicated that BCMoV DNA-A shares a most recent common ancestor with the DNA-A of two viruses that also occur in the Sonoran Desert, SLCV-E and Texas pepper virus (TPV-TAM), and CaLCV from Florida. In contrast, a phylogenetic analysis indicated that BCMoV DNA-B shares a most recent common ancestor with SLCV-E; whereas DNA-B of CaLCV clustered in a separate clade with pepper hausteco virus. Collectively, biological and molecular characteristics indicate that BCMoV is a distinct begomovirus species with the northernmost distribution of any begomovirus isolated from bean in the Americas. Furthermore, the phylogenetic relationships of begomovirus cognate components are not necessarily identical, suggesting that DNA-A and DNA-B of some begomoviruses may have different evolutionary histories.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cooperation in Viral Movement: The Geminivirus BL1 Movement Protein Interacts with BR1 and Redirects It from the Nucleus to the Cell PeripheryPlant Cell, 1995
- DNA replication specificity of TYLCV geminivirus is mediated by the amino‐terminal 116 amino acids of the Rep proteinFEBS Letters, 1995
- Classification and identification of geminiviruses using sequence comparisonsJournal of General Virology, 1995
- Bean Golden Mosaic Geminivirus Type II Isolates from the Dominican Republic and Guatemala: Nucleotide Sequences, Infectious Pseudorecombinants, and Phylogenetic RelationshipsPhytopathology®, 1994
- Pseudorecombination between infectious cloned DNA components of tomato mottle and bean dwarf mosaic geminivirusesJournal of General Virology, 1993
- Complete Nucleotide Sequences of the Infectious Cloned DNAs of Bean Dwarf Mosaic GeminivirusPhytopathology®, 1993
- Genetic Diversity in Geminiviruses Causing Bean Golden Mosaic Disease: The Nucleotide Sequence of the Infectious Cloned DNA Components of a Brazilian Isolate of Bean Golden Mosaic GeminivirusPhytopathology®, 1993
- Biological and Genomic Properties of a Geminivirus Isolated from PepperPhytopathology®, 1990
- Bean Calico Mosaic, a New Disease of Common Bean Caused by a Whitefly-Transmitted GeminivirusPlant Disease, 1990
- A Whitefly-Transmitted Geminivirus from Peppers with Tigré DiseasePlant Disease, 1989