Abstract

A Tospovirus species was isolated from peanut plants showing chlorotic ring spots and chlorosis, and identified as Tomato yellow fruit ring virus (TYFRV) on the basis of its biological, serological, and molecular properties. In host range studies, a broad range of indicator plants was infected by the five isolates studied; all the isolates systemically infected Nicotiana tabacum cultivars and, thus, they were classified into the N-host-infecting type isolates of the virus. These isolates strongly reacted with TYFRV antibodies but not with the specific antibodies of other tospoviruses tested. Recombination analyses showed that the nucleoprotein gene of the peanut isolates and other isolates studied were nonrecombinant. In phylogenetic trees, the virus isolates were clustered in three genogroups: IRN-1, IRN-2, and a new group, POL; the peanut isolates fell into IRN-2 group. Multiple sequence alignments showed some genogroup-specific amino acid substitutions among the virus isolates studied. The results revealed the presence of negative selection in TYFRV populations. Also, the Iranian populations had higher nucleotide diversity compared with the Polish population. Genetic differentiation and gene flow analyses indicated that the populations from Iran and Poland and those belonging to different genogroups were partially differentiated populations. Our findings seem to suggest that there has been frequent gene flow between some populations of the virus in the mid-Eurasian region of Iran.

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