A new genus of alphasatellites associated with banana bunchy top virus in South-East Asia

Author:

Guyot Valentin1,Trieu Tien-Dung2,Insisiengmay Oudomphone3,Zhang Ting4,Iskra-Caruana Marie-Line5,Pooggin Mikhail M1

Affiliation:

1. PHIM Plant Health Institute, University of Montpellier, INRAE, CIRAD, IRD, Institute Agro , 34398 Montpellier, France

2. Northern Mountainous Agriculture and Forestry Science Institute , 290000 Phu Tho City, Vietnam

3. Life Science Research Centre, Science and Innovation Research Institute , Ministry of Education and Sports, Dontiew Road, Xaythany District, 99241 Vientiane Capital, Laos

4. Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences , 650201 Kunming, China

5. CIRAD, DGD-RS, 34398 Montpellier, France

Abstract

Abstract Autonomously-replicating alphasatellites (family Alphasatellitidae) are frequently associated with plant single-stranded (ss)DNA viruses of the families Geminiviridae, Metaxyviridae and Nanoviridae. Alphasatellites encode a single replication-initiator protein (Rep) similar to Rep proteins of helper viruses and depend on helper viruses for encapsidation, movement and transmission. Costs versus benefits of alphasatellite-helper virus association are poorly understood. Our surveys in South-East Asia (SEA) for wild and cultivated banana plants infected with banana bunchy top virus (BBTV, Nanoviridae) and Illumina sequencing reconstruction of their viromes revealed, in addition to a six-component BBTV genome, one to three distinct alphasatellites present in 16 of 24 BBTV-infected plants. Comparative nucleotide and Rep protein sequence analyses classified these alphasatellites into four distinct species: two known species falling into the genus Muscarsatellite (subfamily Petromoalphasatellitinae) previously identified in SEA and two novel species falling into the tentative genus Banaphisatellite (subfamily Nanoalphasatellitinae) so far containing a single species recently identified in Africa. The banaphisatellites were found to be most related to members of the genus Fabenesatellite of subfamily Nanoalphasatellitinae and the genus Gosmusatellite of subfamily Geminialphasatellitinae, both infecting dicots. This suggests a dicot origin of banaphisatellites that got independently associated with distinct strains of monocot-infecting BBTV in Africa and SEA. Analysis of conserved sequence motifs in the common regions driving replication and gene expression of alphasatellites and BBTV strains revealed both differences and similarities, pointing at their ongoing co-evolution. An impact of alphasatellites on BBTV infection and evasion of RNA interference-based antiviral defences was evaluated by measuring relative abundance of BBTV genome components and alphasatellites and by profiling BBTV- and alphasatellite-derived small interfering RNAs. Taken together, our findings shed new light on the provenance of alphasatellites, their co-evolution with helper viruses and potential mutual benefits of their association.

Funder

Institute Agro

Labex Agro

Agropolis Foundation

INRAE

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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