Abstract
Some plants of Jasminum officinale were selected in a nursery for investigation of sanitary status of candidate mother plants before vegetative propagation. The presence of yellow spots and leaf discoloration symptoms pushed for a generic diagnosis through deep sequencing to discover systemic pathogens. Either dsRNA or total RNA were extracted and used in nanopore and Illumina platform for cDNA-PCR, direct RNA and total RNA rRNA-depleted sequencing. A few single reads obtained by nanopore technology or assembled contigs gave unequivocal annotation for the only presence of a jasmine virus C (JaVC, a putative member of genus Carlavirus) isolate. The full-length genome of this isolate was reconstructed, spanning 8490 nucleotides (nt). This isolate shared 90.9% similarity with coat protein sequences and 84% with the entire ORF1 polyprotein, with the other two available JaVC full genomes, isolated from infections in J. sambac in Taiwan and China. The overall nucleotide identity shared by the newly discovered Italian isolate with the Chinese JaVC full genomes was 76.14% (Taiwan) and 75.60% (Fujian). The application of quick nanopore sequencing for virus discovery was assessed. The identification of the virus in a new ornamental host species, largely used in gardening, creates a concern for the potential virus spread and need of testing for production of clean vegetative material.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
7 articles.
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