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Whole-Genome Deep Sequencing Reveals Host-Driven in-planta Evolution of Columnea Latent Viroid (CLVd) Quasi-Species Populations

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Columnea latent viroid (CLVd) is one of the most serious tomato diseases. In general, viroids have high mutation rates. This generates a population of variants (so-called quasi-species) that co-exist in their host and exhibit a huge level of genetic diversity. To study the population of CLVd in individual host plants, we used amplicon sequencing using specific CLVd primers linked with a sample-specific index sequence to amplify libraries. An infectious clone of a CLVd isolate Chaipayon-1 was inoculated on different solanaceous host plants. Six replicates of the amplicon sequencing results showed very high reproducibility. On average, we obtained 133,449 CLVd reads per PCR-replicate and 79 to 561 viroid sequence variants, depending on the plant species. We identified 19 major variants (>1.0% mean relative abundance) in which a total of 16 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and two single nucleotide insertions were observed. All major variants contained a combination of 4 to 6 SNPs. Secondary structure prediction clustered all major variants into a tomato/bolo maka group with four loops (I, II, IV and V), and a chili pepper group with four loops (I, III, IV and V) at the terminal right domain, compared to the CLVd Chaipayon-1 which consists of five loops (I, II, III, IV and V).
Journal: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
ISSN: 1661-6596
Issue: 9
Volume: 21
Pages: 3262
Publication year:2020
Keywords:Virology, viroids, quasi-species, Amplicon sequencing, Columnea latent viroid, High-throughput sequencing, Host interaction, Mutations, Population study, Quasi-species, Variant analysis, Viroid, Viroid secondary structure
Accessibility:Open