Abstract

In Hawaii, passionfruit (Passiflora edulis; Passifloraceae) is grown primarily in residential properties and community gardens (CG). In 2019, passionfruit plants displaying chlorotic spots on young leaves, and green spots in senescing leaves were observed at two CG in Honolulu. Symptoms resembled those of passionfruit green spot virus (PfGSV) infection in Passiflora spp. (Ramos-González et al. 2020) and of the hibiscus strain of citrus leprosis virus C2 (CiLV-C2H) infection in hibiscus in Hawaii (Melzer et al. 2013). Both viruses belong to the genus Cilevirus, family Kitaviridae. Total RNA was extracted from two sample pools comprised of 40 symptomatic leaves collected from both the CG following a CTAB-based procedure (Li et al. 2008). To identify the virus associated with the P. edulis infection, reverse transcription (RT)-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed using CiLV-C2 (Olmedo-Velarde et al. 2021) and PfGSV specific primers (Ramos-González et al. 2020). RT-PCR assay amplified the CiLV-C2 amplicon but failed to produce the PfGSV amplicon from infected leaves. Amplicon sequencing followed by a BLASTn search showed the nucleotide sequence had >99% identity with the CiLV-C2H-RNA1 (KC626783). A ribo-depleted RNA library created using the TruSeq Stranded Total RNA Library Prep kit (Illumina) underwent high throughput sequencing (HTS) on a NextSeq550 Illumina platform (2x75 cycles). The 6.5 million raw reads obtained were trimmed, filtered, and de novo assembled using Metaviral SPAdes v. 3.15.02 (Antipov et al. 2020). The resulting contigs were searched against an in-house database generated from GenBank virus and viroid sequences using BLASTn. This identified 12 and 3 contigs corresponding to CiLV-C2H and watermelon mosaic virus, respectively, with the latter being previously reported in passionfruit (Watanabe et al. 2016). RNA1 contigs covered 80.17% of the CiLV-C2H genome, whereas RNA2 contigs covered 94.5% with an average coverage depth of 31.660 and 57.121, respectively. To obtain the near complete genome of CiLV-C2H, gaps from the assembled HTS data were filled by overlapping RT-PCR followed by Sanger sequencing. RNA1 (8,536 nt, Acc. No. MW413437) and RNA2 (4,878 nt, MW413438) genome sequences shared 99.2% and 97.0% identity with CiLV-C2H-RNA1 (KC626783) and -RNA2 (KC626784). To further confirm the presence of CiLV-C2H in symptomatic P. edulis plants, 40 symptomatic leaf samples were individually tested by RT-PCR, and 30 samples were positive. Brevipalpus mites collected from CiLV-C2H-positive P. edulis leaves were transferred to common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) seedlings (Garita et al. 2013). At 15-30 days post-transfer, RNA extracted from lesions observed in recipient plants tested positive for CiLV-C2H by RT-PCR. Total RNA from individual Brevipalpus mites was isolated, and cDNA was prepared to tentatively identify the mite species involved in CiLV-C2H transmission in passionfruit (Druciarek et al 2019, Olmedo-Velarde et al. 2021). CiLV-C2H was detected in individual mites, and the 28S ribosomal mite RNA sequence (MZ478051) shared 99-100% nucleotide identity with B. yothersi (MK293678 and MT812697), a vector of CiLV-C2 (Roy et al. 2013). CiLV-C2 currently has a host range limited to the families Malvaceae, Araceae, and Rutaceae (Roy et al. 2015). CiLV-C2H infects hibiscus alone and citrus in mixed infection with CiLV-C2 (Roy et al; 2018) which is responsible for causing citrus leprosis disease. Detection of CiLV-C2H in passionfruit expands the number of host families of CiLV-C2H.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call