Deep sequencing evidence from single grapevine plants reveals a virome dominated by mycoviruses

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Abstract

We have characterized the virome in single grapevines by 454 high-throughput sequencing of doublestranded RNA recovered from the vine stem. The analysis revealed a substantial set of sequences similar to those of fungal viruses. Twenty-six putative fungal virus groups were identified from a single plant source. These represented half of all known mycoviral families including the Chrysoviridae, Hypoviridae, Narnaviridae, Partitiviridae, and Totiviridae. Three of the mycoviruses were associated with Botrytis cinerea, a common fungal pathogen of grapes. Most of the rest appeared to be undescribed. The presence of viral sequences identified by BLAST analysis was confirmed by sequencing PCR products generated from the starting material using primers designed from the genomic sequences of putative mycoviruses. To further characterize these sequences as fungal viruses, fungi from the grapevine tissue were cultured and screened with the same PCR probes. Five of the mycoviruses identified in the total grapevine extract were identified again in extracts of the fungal cultures.© The Author(s) 2010.

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Rwahnih, M. A., Daubert, S., Úrbez-Torres, J. R., Cordero, F., & Rowhani, A. (2011). Deep sequencing evidence from single grapevine plants reveals a virome dominated by mycoviruses. Archives of Virology, 156(3), 397–403. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00705-010-0869-8

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