Full-text resources of PSJD and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

PL EN


Preferences help
enabled [disable] Abstract
Number of results
2008 | 55 | 4 | 731-739

Article title

Complete nucleotide sequence of a Polish strain of Peanut stunt virus (PSV-P) that is related to but not a typical member of subgroup I

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Peanut stunt virus (PSV) is a common legume pathogen present worldwide. It is also infectious for many other plants including peanut and some vegetables. Viruses of this species are classified at present into three subgroups based on their serology and nucleotide homology. Some of them may also carry an additional subviral element - satellite RNA. Analysis of the full genome sequence of a Polish strain - PSV-P - associated with satRNA was performed and showed that it may be classified as a derivative of the subgroup I sharing 83.9-87.9% nucleotide homology with other members of this subgroup. A comparative study of sequenced PSV strains indicates that PSV-P shows the highest identity level with PSV-ER or PSV-J depending on the region used for analysis. Phylogenetic analyses, on the other hand, have revealed that PSV-P is related to representatives of the subgroup I to the same degree, with the exception of the coat protein coding sequence where PSV-P is clustered together with PSV-ER.

Year

Volume

55

Issue

4

Pages

731-739

Physical description

Dates

published
2008
received
2008-06-26
revised
2008-10-22
accepted
2008-12-05
(unknown)
2008-12-16

Contributors

  • Interdepartmental Laboratory of Molecular Biology - National Research Institute, Poznań, Poland
  • Interdepartmental Laboratory of Molecular Biology - National Research Institute, Poznań, Poland
  • Department of Virology and Bacteriology, Institute of Plant Protection - National Research Institute, Poznań, Poland

References

  • Boccard R, Baulcombe D (1993) Mutational analysis of cis-acting sequences and gene function in RNA3 of cucumber mosaic viurs. Virology 193: 563-578.
  • Choi SK, Choi JK, Ryu KH, Park WM (2002) Generation of infectious cDNA clones of a Korean strain of tomato aspermy virus. Mol Cells 13: 52-60.
  • Devic M, Jaegle M, Baulcombe D (1990) Cucumber mosaic virus satellite RNA (strain Y): analysis of sequences which affect systemic necrosis on tomato. J Gen Virol 71: 1443-1449.
  • Diaz-Ruiz JR, Kaper JM (1983) Nucleotide sequence relationships among thirty peanut stunt virus isolates determined by competition hybridization. Arch Virol 75: 277-281.
  • Ding SW, Anderson BJ, Haase HR, Symons RH (1994) New overlapping gene encoded by the cucumber mosaic virus genome. Virology 198: 593-601.
  • Ferreiro C, Ostrowka K, Lopez-Moya JJ, Diaz-Ruiz JR (1996) Nucleotide sequence and symptom modulating analysis of a peanut stunt virus-associated satellite RNA from Poland: high level of sequence identities with the American PSV satellites. Eur J Plant Pathol 102: 779-786.
  • Hajimorad MR, Hu CC, Ghabrial SA (1999) Molecular characterization of an atypical old world strain of Peanut stunt virus. Arch Virol 144: 1587-600.
  • Hall TA (1999) BioEdit: a user-friendly biological sequence alignment editor and analysis program for Windows 95/98/NT. Nucleic Acids Symp Ser 41: 95-98.
  • Hu CC, Ghabrial SA (1998) Molecular evidence that strain BV-15 of peanut stunt cucumovirus is a reassortant between subgroup I and II strains. Phytopathology 88: 92-97.
  • Hu CC, Aboul-Ata AE, Naidu RA, Ghabrial SA (1997) Evidence for the occurrence of two distinct subgroups of peanut stunt cucumovirus strains: molecular characterization of RNA3. J Gen Virol 78: 929-939.
  • Hu CC, Sanger M, Ghabrial SA (1998) Production of infectious RNA transcripts from full-length cDNA clones representing two subgroups of peanut stunt virus strains: mapping satellite RNA support to RNA1. J Gen Virol 79: 2013-2021.
  • Karasawa A, Nakaho K, Kakutani T, Minobe Y, Ehara Y (1991) Nucleotide sequence of RNA 3 of peanut stunt cucumovirus. Virology 185: 464-467.
  • Karasawa A, Nakaho K, Kakutani T, Minobe Y, Ehara Y (1992) Nucleotide sequence analyses of peanut stunt cucumovirus RNAs 1 and 2. J Gen Virol 73: 701-707.
  • Kaper JM, Geletka LM, Wu GS, Tousignant ME (1995) Effect of temperature on cucumber mosaic virus satellite-induced lethal tomato necrosis is helper virus strain dependent. Arch Virol 140: 65-74.
  • Kumar S, Tamura K, Nei M (2004) MEGA3: Integrated software for molecular evolutionary genetics analysis and sequence alignment. Brief Bioinform 5: 150-163.
  • Koonin EV, Dolja VV (1993) Evolution and taxonomy of positive-strand RNA viruses: implication of comparative analysis of amino acid sequences. Crit Rev Biochem Mol Biol 28: 375-430.
  • Militao V, Moreno I, Rodriguez-Cerezo E, Garcia-Arenal F (1998) Differential interactions among isolates of peanut stunt cucumovirus and its satellite RNA. J Gen Virol 79: 177-184.
  • Miller LI, Troutman JL (1966) Stunt disease of peanuts in Virginia. Plant Disease 50: 139-143.
  • Mushegian AR, Koonin EV (1993) Cell-to-cell movement of plant viruses. Insights from amino acid sequence comparisons of movement proteins and from homologies with cellular transport systems. Arch Virol 133: 239-257.
  • Naidu RA, Collins GB, Ghabrial SA (1991a) Symptom-modulating properties of peanut stunt virus satellite RNA sequence variants. Mol Plant Microbe Interact 4: 268-275.
  • Naidu RA, Collins GB, Ghabrial SA (1991b) Nucleotide sequence analysis of a cDNA clone encoding the coat protein gene of peanut stunt virus. Plant Mol Biol 17: 175-177.
  • Naidu RA, Collins GB, Ghabrial SA (1992) Peanut stunt virus satellite RNA: analysis of sequences that affect symptom attenuation in tobacco. Virology 189: 668-677.
  • Naidu RA, Hu CC, Pennington RE, Ghabrial SA (1995) Differentation of eastern and western strains of peanut stunt cucumovirus based on satellite RNA support and nucleotide sequence homology. Phytopathology 85: 502-507.
  • Obrepalska-Steplowska A, Nowaczyk K, Budziszewska M, Czerwoniec A, Pospieszny H (2008) The sequence and model structure analysis of three Polish peanut stunt virus strains. Virus Genes 36: 221-229.
  • Palukaitis P (1988) Pathogenicity regulation by satellite RNAs of cucumber mosaic virus: minor nucleotide sequence changes alter host responses. Mol Plant Microbe Interact 1: 175-181.
  • Pelczyk M, Obrepalska-Steplowska A, Pospieszny H (2006) Subviral molecules of RNA associated with plant ss(+)RNA viruses. Postepy Biochem 52: 212-221 (in Polish).
  • Pospieszny H (1988) Peanut stunt virus - the novel pathogen of legume plants in Poland. J Plant Protect Res 28: 27-75 (in Polish).
  • Rizzo TM, Palukaitis P (1989) Nucleotide sequence and evolutionary relationships of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) strains: CMV RNA 1. J Gen Virol 70: 1-11.
  • Roossinck MJ, Sleat D, Palukaitis P (1992) Satellite RNAs of plant viruses: structures and biological effects. Microbiol Rev 56: 265-279.
  • Rozanov MN, Koonin EV, Gorbalenya AE (1992) Conservation of the putative methyltransferase domain: A hallmark of the 'Sindbis-like' supergroup of positive-strand RNA viruses. J Gen Virol 73: 2129-2134.
  • Saitou N, Nei M (1987) The neighbor-joining method: a new method for reconstructing phylogenetic trees. Mol Biol Evol 4: 406-425.
  • Salanki K, Thole V, Balazs E, Burgyan J (1994) Complete nucleotide sequence of the RNA 3 from subgroup II of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) strain: Trk7. Virus Res 31: 379-384.
  • Sambrook J, Fritsch EF, Maniatis T (1989) Molecular cloning. A laboratory manual (2nd edn), pp 7.43-7.45. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, New York.
  • Simon AE, Roosinck MJ, Havelda Z (2004) Plant virus satellite and defective interfering RNAs: new paradigms for a new century. Annu Rev Phytopathol 42: 415-437.
  • Szilassy D, Salanki K, Balazs E (1999) Molecular evidence for the existence of two distinct subgroups in cucumber mosaic cucumovirus. Virus Genes 18: 221-227.
  • Thompson JD, Gibson TJ, Plewniak F, Jeanmougin F, Higgins DG (1997) The ClustalX windows interface: flexible strategies for multiple sequence alignment aided by quality analysis tools. Nucleic Acids Res 25: 4876-4882.
  • Twardowicz-Jakusz A, Pospieszny H (1983) Comparison of two strains of Peanut stunt virus isolated from cellery and yellow lupine in Poland. Bull Pol Acad Sci 29: 423-427.
  • White JL, Tousignant ME, Geletka LM, Kaper JM (1995) The replication of a necrogenic cucumber mosaic virus satellite is temperature-sensitive in tomato. Arch Virol 140: 53-63.
  • Wu G, Kaper JM, Tousignant ME, Masuta C, Kuwata S, Takanami Y, Pena L, Diaz-Ruiz JR (1993) Tomato necrosis and the 369 nucleotide Y satellite of cucumber mosaic virus, factors affecting satellite biological expression. J Gen Virol 74: 161-168.
  • Yamaguchi N, Seshimo Y, Yshimoto E, Ahn HI, Ryu KH, Choi JK, Masuta C (2005) Genetic mapping of the compatibility between a lily isolate of Cucumber mosaic virus and a satellite RNA. J Gen Virol 86: 2359-2369.
  • Yan LY, Xu ZY, Goldbach R, Kunrong C, Prins M (2005) Nucleotide sequence analyses of genomic RNAs of Peanut stunt virus Mi, the type strain representative of a novel PSV subgroup from China. Arch Virol 150: 1203-1211.
  • Zeyong XU, Barnett OW, Gibson PB (1986) Characterization of peanut stunt virus strains by host reactions, serology, and RNA patterns. Phytopathology 76: 390-395.
  • Zeyong XC, Higgins M, Kunrong C, Dietzgen RG, Zhongyi Z, Liying Y, Xiao-Ping F (1998) Evidence for a third taxonomic subgroup of peanut stunt virus from China. Plant Dis 82: 992-998.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.bwnjournal-article-abpv55p731kz
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.