Abstract

The family Geminiviridae comprises a group of plant-infecting circular ssDNA viruses that severely constrain agricultural production throughout the temperate regions of the world, and are a particularly serious threat to food security in sub-Saharan Africa. While geminiviruses exhibit considerable diversity in terms of their nucleotide sequences, genome structures, host ranges and insect vectors, the best characterised and economically most important of these viruses are those in the genus Begomovirus. Whereas begomoviruses are generally considered to be either monopartite (one ssDNA component) or bipartite (two circular ssDNA components called DNA-A and DNA-B), many apparently monopartite begomoviruses are associated with additional subviral ssDNA satellite components, called alpha- (DNA-αs) or betasatellites (DNA-βs). Additionally, subgenomic molecules, also known as defective interfering (DIs) DNAs that are usually derived from the parent helper virus through deletions of parts of its genome, are also associated with bipartite and monopartite begomoviruses. The past three decades have witnessed the emergence and diversification of various new begomoviral species and associated DI DNAs, in southern Africa, East Africa, and proximal Indian Ocean islands, which today threaten important vegetable and commercial crops such as, tobacco, cassava, tomato, sweet potato, and beans. This review aims to describe what is known about these viruses and their impacts on sustainable production in this sensitive region of the world.

Highlights

  • Geminiviruses in the genus Begomovirus are among the most devastating pathogens worldwide of a variety of cultivated crops, including cassava, sweet potato, beans, tomato, cotton and grain legumes [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]

  • Whitefly-transmitted geminiviruses are thought to have evolved in the Old World

  • Genetic recombination due to sharing of common hosts, and expansion of host ranges for some begomoviral species, has resulted in diverse species complexes which pose a serious threat to agriculture in southern and eastern African countries, but globally

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Summary

Introduction

Geminiviruses (family: Geminiviridae) in the genus Begomovirus are among the most devastating pathogens worldwide of a variety of cultivated crops, including cassava, sweet potato, beans, tomato, cotton and grain legumes [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. In addition to the likely existence of a wide variety of economically relevant begomovirus species, small circular or defective DNA molecules associated with cassava- (South Africa and Tanzania) and tobacco- (Zimbabwe) infecting begomoviruses have been reported [66,78,87]. Note that bean yellow dwarf virus is a mastrevirus, it is the only known economically relevant eudicot-infecting non-begomoviral geminivirus in the SADC/SWIO region, and is considered here for the sake of completeness

General Introduction
Geographic Diversity of Begomoviral Species and Variants
Transmission and Diversity of Begomoviruses in South Africa and Mozambique
Recombination
Defective Interfering DNAs Associated with CMBs
Geographic Diversity of Tomato Begomovirus Species and Variants
Emergence and Transmission
Management and Control of Tomato-Infecting Begomoviruses
Recent Detection of Sweepoviruses in South Africa
Geographic Diversity of Tobacco Begomovirus Species
Atypical Defective DNA Molecules Associated with TbLCZV from Zimbabwe
Findings
Conclusions
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