Rapid multilocus adaptation of clonal cabbage leaf curl virus populations to Arabidopsis thaliana

J. Steen Hoyer,Olivia W. Wilkins, Aanandi Munshi, Emma Wiese,Divya Dubey, Savannah Renard, Karoline Rosendal Hartø Mortensen,Anna E. Dye,Ignazio Carbone,Siobain Duffy,José Trinidad Ascencio-Ibáñez

Phytobiomes Journal(2022)

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摘要
Cabbage leaf curl virus (CabLCV) has a bipartite single-stranded DNA genome and infects the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana . CabLCV serves as a model for the genus Begomovirus , members of which cause tremendous crop losses worldwide. We have used CabLCV as a model for within-plant virus evolution by inoculating individual plants with infectious clones of either a wild-type or mutagenized version of the CabLCV genome. Consistent with previous reports, detrimental substitutions in the Replication-associated gene (Rep) were readily compensated for by direct reversion and/or alternative mutations. A surprising number of common mutations were detected elsewhere in both viral segments (DNA-A and DNA-B) indicating convergent evolution and suggesting that CabLCV may not be as well adapted to A. thaliana as commonly presumed. Consistent with this idea, a spontaneous coat protein variant consistently rose to high allele frequency in susceptible accession Col-0, at a higher rate than in hypersusceptible accession Sei-0. Numerous high-frequency mutations were also detected in a candidate Rep binding site in DNA-B. Our results reinforce the fact that spontaneous mutation of this type of virus occurs rapidly and can change the majority consensus sequence of a within-plant virus population in weeks. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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