Abstract

Broad bean wilt virus 2 (BBWV-2), which belongs to the genus Fabavirus of the family Secoviridae, is an important pathogen that causes damage to broad bean, pepper, yam, spinach and other economically important ornamental and horticultural crops worldwide. Previously, only limited reports have shown the genetic variation of BBWV2. Meanwhile, the detailed evolutionary changes, synonymous codon usage bias and host adaptation of this virus are largely unclear. Here, we performed comprehensive analyses of the phylodynamics, reassortment, composition bias and codon usage pattern of BBWV2 using forty-two complete genome sequences of BBWV-2 isolates together with two other full-length RNA1 sequences and six full-length RNA2 sequences. Both recombination and reassortment had a significant influence on the genomic evolution of BBWV2. Through phylogenetic analysis we detected three and four lineages based on the ORF1 and ORF2 nonrecombinant sequences, respectively. The evolutionary rates of the two BBWV2 ORF coding sequences were 8.895 × 10−4 and 4.560 × 10−4 subs/site/year, respectively. We found a relatively conserved and stable genomic composition with a lower codon usage choice in the two BBWV2 protein coding sequences. ENC-plot and neutrality plot analyses showed that natural selection is the key factor shaping the codon usage pattern of BBWV2. Strong correlations between BBWV2 and broad bean and pepper were observed from similarity index (SiD), codon adaptation index (CAI) and relative codon deoptimization index (RCDI) analyses. Our study is the first to evaluate the phylodynamics, codon usage patterns and adaptive evolution of a fabavirus, and our results may be useful for the understanding of the origin of this virus.

Highlights

  • Broad bean wilt virus 2 (BBWV-2) belongs to the genus Fabavirus of the Comovirinae subfamily, Secoviridae family

  • We considered that reassortment occurred when the two segments of BBWV2 isolate divided into different lineages based on ORF1 and ORF2 trees

  • Recombination can influence the topology of a phylogenetic tree and overall codon usage patterns at either the genome or gene level [56,57]

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Summary

Introduction

Broad bean wilt virus 2 (BBWV-2) belongs to the genus Fabavirus of the Comovirinae subfamily, Secoviridae family. BBWV-2 is an important pathogen causing extensive damage in broad bean, pepper, yam, spinach and other economically important horticultural and ornamental crops worldwide [1,2,3,4,5,6], and it is transmitted by aphids in a nonpersistent manner. The virions of BBWV-2 contain two proteins (large and small coat proteins) which form an icosahedral particle. RNA1 encodes a single large polyprotein with functional proteins involved in genome replication and expression that are produced by proteolytic cleavage. RNA2 encodes a single large polyprotein, which is proteolytically processed into three functional proteins, including a movement protein and two coat proteins

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