1. The Complete Nucleotide Sequence and Genomic Organization of Citrus Leprosis Associated Virus, Cytoplasmatic type (CiLV-C)
- Author
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Hamilton Jordão, Marcos C. Alegria, Fernanda Ferrari, Oliveira F, Assumpção L, Vagner K. Okura, da Silva Ac, Silva Vh, Marcelo A. Vallim, Cardozo Jc, Paulo Arruda, Jesus Aparecido Ferro, Franchiscini Fj, Joaquim Silva, P. F. Giachetto, Franco Sf, João Paulo Kitajima, Michèle Claire Breton, Camargo Me, Almir S. Zanca, Fernando C. Reinach, Christian C. Greggio, Renata C. Pascon, Silva Gg, and C. I. Aguilar-Vildoso
- Subjects
viruses ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Genome, Viral ,Virus ,Plant Viruses ,Virology ,Plant virus ,Genetics ,RNA Viruses ,Viroplasm ,Citrus leprosis disease ,Molecular Biology ,Phylogeny ,Plant Diseases ,Genomic organization ,Brevipalpus ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Nucleic acid sequence ,Tobamovirus ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Plant Leaves ,RNA, Viral ,Citrus sinensis - Abstract
The Citrus leprosis disease (CiL) is associated to a virus (CiLV) transmitted by Brevipalpus spp. mites (Acari: Tenuipalpidae). CiL is endemic in Brazil and its recently spreading to Central America represents a threat to citrus industry in the USA. Electron microscopy images show two forms of CiLV: a rare nuclear form, characterized by rod-shaped naked particle (CiLV-N) and a common cytoplasmic form (CiLV-C) associated with bacilliform-enveloped particle and cytoplasmic viroplasm. Due to this morphological feature, CiLV-C has been treated as Rhabdovirus-like. In this paper we present the complete nucleotide sequence and genomic organization of CiLV-C. It is a bipartite virus with sequence similarity to ssRNA positive plant virus. RNA1 encodes a putative replicase polyprotein and an ORF with no known function. RNA2 encodes 4 ORFs. pl5, p24 and p61 have no significant similarity to any known proteins and p32 encodes a protein with similarity to a viral movement protein. The CiLV-C sequences are associated with typical symptoms of CiL by RT-PCR. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that CiLV-C is probably a member of a new family of plant virus evolutionarily related to Tobamovirus.
- Published
- 2006