Affiliation:
1. Plant Biology Division, The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Ardmore, OK 73402, USA
Abstract
The vast majority of well-characterized eukaryotic viruses are those that cause acute or chronic infections in humans and domestic plants and animals. However, asymptomatic persistent viruses have been described in animals, and are thought to be sources for emerging acute viruses. Although not previously described in these terms, there are also many viruses of plants that maintain a persistent lifestyle. They have been largely ignored because they do not generally cause disease. The persistent viruses in plants belong to the family
Partitiviridae
or the genus
Endornavirus
. These groups also have members that infect fungi. Phylogenetic analysis of the partitivirus RNA-dependent RNA polymerase genes suggests that these viruses have been transmitted between plants and fungi. Additional families of viruses traditionally thought to be fungal viruses are also found frequently in plants, and may represent a similar scenario of persistent lifestyles, and some acute or chronic viruses of crop plants may maintain a persistent lifestyle in wild plants. Persistent, chronic and acute lifestyles of plant viruses are contrasted from both a functional and evolutionary perspective, and the potential role of these lifestyles in host evolution is discussed.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Reference49 articles.
1. Light and electron microscope observations on chlorotic rusty spot, a disorder of cherry in Italy;Alioto D.;J. Plant Pathol.,2003
2. Properties of a cryptic virus from pepper (Capsicum annuum);Arancibia R. A.;Plant Pathol.,1995
3. Cryptic Plant Viruses
Cited by
211 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献