A Bipartite Geminivirus with a Highly Divergent Genomic Organization Identified in Olive Trees May Represent a Novel Evolutionary Direction in the Family Geminiviridae
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Abstract
Olea europaea Geminivirus (OEGV) was recently identified in olive in Italy through HTS.
In this work, we used HTS to show the presence of an OEGV isolate in Portuguese olive trees and
suggest the evolution direction of OEGV. The bipartite genome (DNA-A and DNA-B) of the OEGV-PT
is similar to Old World begomoviruses in length, but it lacks a pre-coat protein (AV2), which is a
typical feature of NewWorld begomoviruses (NW). DNA-A genome organization is closer to NW,
containing four ORFs; three in complementary-sense AC1/Rep, AC2/TrAP, AC3/REn and one in
virion-sense AV1/CP, but no AC4, typical of begomoviruses. DNA-B comprises two ORFs; MP in
virion sense with higher similarity to the tyrosine phosphorylation site of NW, but in opposite sense
to begomoviruses; BC1, with no known conserved domains in the complementary sense and no NSP
typical of bipartite begomoviruses. Our results show that OEGV presents the longest common region
among the begomoviruses, and the TATA box and four replication-associated iterons in a completely
new arrangement. We propose two new putative conserved regions for the geminiviruses CP. Lastly,
we highlight unique features that may represent a new evolutionary direction for geminiviruses and
suggest that OEGV-PT evolution may have occurred from an ancient OW monopartite Begomovirus
that lost V2 and C4, gaining functions on cell-to-cell movement by acquiring a DNA-B component.
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Materatski, P.; Jones, S.; Patanita, M.; Campos, M.D.; Dias, A.B.; Félix, M.D.R.; Varanda, C.M.R. (2021) A Bipartite Geminivirus with a Highly Divergent Genomic Organization Identified in Olive Trees May Represent a Novel Evolutionary Direction in the Family Geminiviridae. Viruses, 13, 2035.
doi.org/10.3390/v13102035