Capsicum chlorosis virus (CaCV) is a negative sense ssRNA virus belonging to the genus Orthotospovirus in the family Tospoviridae. It was first discovered in Australia, and then reported in other places including Thailand, China, India, Greece, and United States (Zheng et al.2011; Melzer et al.2014; Chrysoula et al. 2018; Abudurexiti et al. 2019). CaCV infects plants of the families Amaranthaceae, Apocynaceae, Chenopodiaceae, Cucurbitaceae, Amaryllidaceae, Fabaceae and Solanaceae (Basavaraj et al. 2017; Basavaraj et al. 2020). Chromolaena odorata L. (commonly known as Feiji cao in China) is an invasive weedy herb that belongs to the genus Eupatorium (family Asteraceae), and is native to Central America. In May 2020, serrated chlorotic ring and chlorotic ringspots resembling symptoms of orthotospovirus infection (Supplementary Figure 1) was observed on the leaves of C. odorata plants in Honghe County, Yunnan. Three symptomatic leaf samples were collected and double antibody sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (DAS-ELISA) was performed using antisera targeting Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV), Calla lily chlorotic spot virus (CCSV), Capsicum chlorosis virus (CaCV), and Tomato zonate spot virus (TZSV) (Proteintech Group, Inc., China). Buffer solution and healthy leaves were used as a blank and negative controls, respectively. All three symptomatic samples showed positive reactions with only CaCV antiserum (OD450 of 0.315-0.345 relative to 0.078 and 0.076 for healthy plants and the blank control, respectively. The total RNA extracted from the positive samples were further analyzed by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) using generic primers gL3637 (CCTTTAACAGTDGAAACAT) and gL4435c (CATDGCRCAAGARTGRTARACAGA) which were designed to amplify partial L segment encoding the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP) of orthotospoviruses (Chu, et al. 2001). The expected ~800 bp DNA fragment was amplified from all three positive samples by RT-PCR. The amplified DNA was cloned and sequenced. BLAST search of the partial L RNA sequence (GenBank acc. nos. MW964378 to MW964380) revealed that they shared 86.2-97.4% nucleotide (nt) and 97.2-100% amino acid (aa) sequence identities with different isolates of CaCV available in GenBank with CaCV chili isolates (KU941834 to KU941836) from India sharing the highest aa identity of 100%. This confirmed the presence of CaCV in the symptomatic C. odorata plants. The 825 bp complete nucleocapsid protein (NP) of CaCV was also amplified from the samples using primers CaCV-F: ATGTCTAMCGTYAGGCAAC and CaCV-R: TYACACYTCWATAGAWGTACTAG) (Basavaraj et al. 2020), cloned, and sequenced to obtain complete S fragment-nucleocapsid protein (NP) with a size of 825 bp (MW964381 to MW964383). The pairwise comparisons of three fragments showed 85.1-98.3% nt and 87.6-99.6% aa sequence identities with different isolates of CaCV. Maximum-Likelihood phylogenetic trees inferred from the partial RdRP and complete NP aa sequences showed that the C. odorata isolates (CaCV-YN) clustered closely with CaCV tomato isolate from Taiwan and tomato (Yuxi-2013) isolate from China, respectively (Supplementary Figure 1). To our knowledge, this is the first time CaCV has been detected in C. odorata. This study will serve as an important reference for the study of host range of CaCV. Further studies will be required to determine whether thrips could transmit CaCV between C. odorata and other hosts of the virus.
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