Molecular characterization of tobacco ringspot virus from Iris ensata

2020 
Tobacco ringspot virus (TRSV) is an important plant pathogen that causes severe diseases in tobacco plants. In recent years, this virus has been reported in a number of ornamental plants. However, it has never been reported from Japanese iris, a famous traditional ornamental plant distributed in Asian countries. In this study, the near-complete bipartite genome of a nepovirus (TRSV-Iris) infecting Japanese iris from Taiwan of China was determined. The RNA1 and RNA2 are 7512 and 3899 nucleotides in length, and encodes a polyprotein of 2303 and 1078 amino acids, respectively. Sequence analysis indicates that TRSV-Iris shares more than 80% amino acid sequence identity, the threshold values of the species demarcation for the genus Nepovirus, with known TRSV isolates either in the conserved Pro-Pol or CP regions, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that TRSV-Iris is a TRSV isolate.
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