Article All rights reserved
refereed
published

High throughput RNA sequencing discovers symptomatic and latent viruses: an example from ornamental hibiscus

Affiliation
Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China
Zhou, S.;
GND
172616271
Affiliation
Julius Kühn-Institute (JKI), Institute for Epidemiology and Pathogen Diagnostics, Germany
Richert-Pöggeler, Katja R.;
Affiliation
Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China
Wang, Z.;
Affiliation
Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China
Schwarzacher, T.;
Affiliation
Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China
Heslop-Harrison, J.S.;
Affiliation
Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China
Liu, Q.

Hibiscus rosa-sinensis L. (Hibiscus, Malvaceae) is an ornamental species grown widely in landscape plantings. We collected leaves from a plant on an urban sidewalk near a market in Guangzhou that showed multiple symptoms of leaf rolling, deformation and chlorosis. Initial evaluation by electron microscopy using negative staining of dip preparations revealed the presence of Tobamovirus-like particles. Total RNA was extracted and without any RNA selection based on sequence, was used for cDNA library construction and high-throughput survey sequencing. Chloroplast, ribosomal, and mitochondrial sequences were filtered out of the 814 Mb of clean sequence data (from 2,712,161 paired reads of 150 bp), eliminating 79.1% of reads. 1,135,848×150 bp of the sequence was retained and screened for viral sequences. Assembly of these sequences revealed nine virus species from seven virus genera: tobacco mosaic virus, tobacco mild green mosaic virus and hibiscus latent Singapore virus (Tobamovirus), turnip mosaic virus (Potyvirus), potato virus M (Carlavirus), hibiscus chlorotic ringspot virus (Betacarmovirus), Fabavirus sp. (Fabavirus), cotton leaf curl Multan virus (Begomovirus) and Chenopodium quinoa mitovirus 1 (a putative Mitovirus replicating in mitochondria). Mapping the reads to complete virus reference sequences showed high and uniform coverage of the genomes from 3,729× coverage for turnip mosaic virus to 22× for cotton leaf curl Multan virus. By comparison, nuclear reference genes actin showed 14× coverage and polyubiquitin 27×. Notable variants from reference sequences (SNPs) were identified. With the low cost of sequencing and potential for semi-automated bioinformatic pipelines, the whole-RNA approach has huge potential for identifying multiple undiagnosed viruses in ornamental plants, resulting in the ability to take preventive measures in production facilities against virus spread and to improve product quality for the mutual benefit of producers and consumers.

Files

Cite

Citation style:
Could not load citation form.

Access Statistic

Total:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:
Last 12 Month:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:

Rights

Use and reproduction:
All rights reserved