Evolutionary dynamics of bipartite begomoviruses revealed by complete genome analysis

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)(2020)

Cited 11|Views20
No score
Abstract
Several key evolutionary events marked the evolution of geminiviruses, culminating with the emergence of bipartite genomes represented by viruses classified in the genus Begomovirus . This genus represents the most abundant group of multipartite viruses, contributing significantly to the observed abundance of multipartite species in the virosphere. Although aspects related to virus-host interactions and evolutionary dynamics have been extensively studied, the bipartite nature of these viruses has been little explored in evolutionary studies. We performed a parallel evolutionary analysis of the DNA-A and DNA-B components of New World begomoviruses. A total of 239 full-length DNA-B sequences obtained in this study, combined with 292 DNA-A and 76 DNA-B sequences retrieved from GenBank, were analyzed. The results indicate that the DNA-A and DNA-B respond differentially to evolutionary processes, with the DNA-B being more permissive to variation and more prone to recombination than the DNA-A. Although a clear geographic segregation was observed for both components, differences in the genetic structure between DNA-A and DNA-B were also observed, with cognate components belonging to distinct genetic clusters. DNA-B coding regions evolve under the same selection pressures than DNA-A coding regions. Together, our results indicate an interplay between reassortment and recombination acting at different levels across distinct subpopulations and components. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined