PLoS Pathogens (Aug 2008)

Diversification of rice yellow mottle virus and related viruses spans the history of agriculture from the neolithic to the present.

  • Denis Fargette,
  • Agnès Pinel-Galzi,
  • Drissa Sérémé,
  • Séverine Lacombe,
  • Eugénie Hébrard,
  • Oumar Traoré,
  • Gnissa Konaté

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000125
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 8
p. e1000125

Abstract

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The mechanisms of evolution of plant viruses are being unraveled, yet the timescale of their evolution remains an enigma. To address this critical issue, the divergence time of plant viruses at the intra- and inter-specific levels was assessed. The time of the most recent common ancestor (TMRCA) of Rice yellow mottle virus (RYMV; genus Sobemovirus) was calculated by a Bayesian coalescent analysis of the coat protein sequences of 253 isolates collected between 1966 and 2006 from all over Africa. It is inferred that RYMV diversified approximately 200 years ago in Africa, i.e., centuries after rice was domesticated or introduced, and decades before epidemics were reported. The divergence time of sobemoviruses and viruses of related genera was subsequently assessed using the age of RYMV under a relaxed molecular clock for calibration. The divergence time between sobemoviruses and related viruses was estimated to be approximately 9,000 years, that between sobemoviruses and poleroviruses approximately 5,000 years, and that among sobemoviruses approximately 3,000 years. The TMRCA of closely related pairs of sobemoviruses, poleroviruses, and luteoviruses was approximately 500 years, which is a measure of the time associated with plant virus speciation. It is concluded that the diversification of RYMV and related viruses has spanned the history of agriculture, from the Neolithic age to the present.