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Characterization of Potato Virus Y Isolates and Assessment of Nanopore Sequencing to Detect and Genotype Potato Viruses.

Authors :
Della Bartola M
Byrne S
Mullins E
Source :
Viruses [Viruses] 2020 Apr 23; Vol. 12 (4). Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Apr 23.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Potato virus Y (PVY) is the most economically important virus infecting cultivated potato ( Solanum tuberosum L.). Accurate diagnosis is crucial to regulate the trade of tubers and for the sanitary selection of plant material for propagation. However, high genetic diversity of PVY represents a challenge for the detection and classification of isolates. Here, the diversity of Irish PVY isolates from a germplasm collection and commercial sites was investigated using conventional molecular and serological techniques. Recombinant PVY isolates were prevalent, with PVY <superscript>NTNa</superscript> being the predominant genotype. In addition, we evaluated Nanopore sequencing to detect and reconstruct the whole genome sequence of four viruses (PVY, PVX, PVS, PLRV) and five PVY genotypes in a subset of eight potato plants. De novo assembly of Nanopore sequencing reads produced single contigs covering greater than 90% of the viral genome and sharing greater than 99.5% identity to the consensus sequences obtained with Illumina sequencing. Interestingly, single near full genome contigs were obtained for different isolates of PVY co-infecting the same plant. Mapping reads to available reference viral genomes enabled us to generate near complete genome sequences sharing greater than 99.90% identity to the Illumina-derived consensus. This is the first report describing the use of Oxford Nanopore's MinION to detect and genotype potato viruses. We reconstructed the genome of PVY and other RNA viruses; indicating the technologies potential for virus detection in potato production systems, and for the study of genetic diversity of highly heterogeneous viruses such as PVY.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1999-4915
Volume :
12
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Viruses
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32340210
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/v12040478