High Plains wheat mosaic emaravirus | |
---|---|
The symptoms of High Plains wheat mosaic emaravirus on maize and wheat. | |
Virus classification | |
(unranked): | Virus |
Realm: | Riboviria |
Kingdom: | Orthornavirae |
Phylum: | Negarnaviricota |
Class: | Ellioviricetes |
Order: | Bunyavirales |
Family: | Fimoviridae |
Genus: | Emaravirus |
Species: | High Plains wheat mosaic emaravirus |
Synonyms | |
|
High Plains wheat mosaic emaravirus (WMoV), or High Plains virus (HPV) or Maize red stripe virus (MRSV/MRStV) is the causative agent of High plains disease of maize and wheat.[1] It is spread by wheat curl mite, Aceria tosichella, which also transmits Wheat streak mosaic virus.[2][3] The mite's ability to transmit a number of different viruses to cereal crops make it an economically important agricultural pest.[4] In late June 2017 this virus was first detected in Canada, in Alberta.[5] The Alberta samples were 99% similar to those in the USA.[5] As Wheat streak mosaic virus is already present in Alberta, and coinfection with these two causes even more severe damage, this could cause much higher yield losses.[5]
Genome
Researchers at USDA-ARS published the whole genome of HPWMoV. They reported that the eriophyid mite-transmitted Wheat mosaic virus contains eight genomic RNA segments, the most in a known negative-sense RNA plant virus. [6] The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, glycoprotein precursor, nucleocapsid, and P4 proteins of WMoV exhibited limited sequence homology with the orthologous proteins of other emaraviruses, while proteins encoded by additional genomic RNA segments displayed no significant homology with proteins reported in GenBank, suggesting that the genus Emaravirus evolved further with a divergent octapartite genome. The genome of HPWMoV was shown to encode two suppressors of RNA silencing, to counter antiviral defense of the host wheat plants.[7] [8]
References
- ↑ Hadi, B.A.R.; Langham, M.A.C.; Osborne, L.; Tilmon, K. J. (2011). "Wheat Streak Mosaic Virus on Wheat: Biology and Management". Journal of Integrated Pest Management. 2 (1): J1–J5. doi:10.1603/IPM10017.
- ↑ Handbook of Maize: Its Biology Bennetzen, Jeff L.; Hake, Sarah C. (Eds.) 2009 ISBN 978-0-387-79418-1
- ↑ Stewart, L. R.; Paul, P. A.; Qu, F.; Redinbaugh, M. G.; Miao, H.; Todd, J.; Jones, M. (2013). "Disease Notes". Plant Disease. 97 (8): 1125. doi:10.1094/PDIS-03-13-0243-PDN. PMID 30722503.
Wheat mosaic virus (WMoV), the Causal Agent of High Plains Disease, is Present in Ohio Wheat Fields
- ↑ http://www.apsnet.org/publications/apsnetfeatures/Pages/wheatviruses.aspx "Occurrence of Viruses in Wheat in the Great Plains Region, 2008, Plant Management Network, Mary Burrows, Mary Franc, Charlie Rush, Tamla Blunt, Kasia Kinzer, Jen Olson, Judy O'Mara, Jacob Price, Connie Tande, Amy Ziems, James Stack
- 1 2 3 Abdullahi, I.; Bennypaul, H.; Phelan, J.; Aboukhaddour, R.; Harding, M. W. (2020-10-20). "First Report of High Plains Wheat Mosaic Emaravirus Infecting Foxtail Barley and Wheat in Canada". Plant Disease. American Phytopathological Society. 104 (12): PDIS–04–20–0872. doi:10.1094/pdis-04-20-0872-pdn. ISSN 0191-2917.
- ↑ Satyanarayana Tatineni (2014). "An eriophyid mite-transmitted plant virus contains eight genomic RNA segments with unusual heterogeneity in the nucleocapsid protein". Journal of Virology. 88 (20): 11834–11845. doi:10.1128/JVI.01901-14. PMC 4178757. PMID 25100845.
- ↑ Adarsh K. Gupta (2018). "Octapartite negative-sense RNA genome of High Plains wheat mosaic virus encodes two suppressors of RNA silencing". Virology. 518: 152–162. doi:10.1016/j.virol.2018.02.013. PMID 29499560.
- ↑ Adarsh K. Gupta (2019). "P7 and P8 proteins of High Plains wheat mosaic virus, a negative-strand RNA virus, employ distinct mechanisms of RNA silencing suppression". Virology. 535: 20–31. doi:10.1016/j.virol.2019.06.011. PMID 31254744. S2CID 195764678.
External links
- Data related to High Plains wheat mosaic emaravirus at Wikispecies
- "High plains wheat mosaic emaravirus (high plains disease)". Centre for Agriculture and Bioscience International Invasive Species Compendium. 2019-11-20. Retrieved 2020-12-07.