Abstract

Coriander is a herbaceous spice and condiment crop also known for its medicinal properties. The present study identified two putative novel deltapartitiviruses and an enamovirus tentatively named as Coriandrum sativumdeltapartitivirus 1, 2 (CsDPV1, 2) and Coriandrum sativumenamovirus (CsEV) in the publicly available transcriptome-assembled contigs derived from coriander grown in India. CsDPV1 and 2 contained tripartite and bipartite genomes, respectively, with each genome segment encoding a single open reading frame (ORF). CsEV contained five ORFs encoding proteins P0, P1, P2, P3 and P5. Phylogenetic analysis revealed three distinct subgroups of deltapartitiviruses wherein CsDPV1 and 2 grouped in subgroup 3 and 1, respectively, whilst CsEV formed a distinct sub-clade within enamoviruses. Further, the presence of CsDPV2 in fruit samples of one of the cultivars from where the virus was identified was confirmed through RT-PCR assay and Sanger sequencing. The study highlights the need for further studies on understanding the importance and the biological properties of identified novel viruses.

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