First report of Passion fruit green spot virus in yellow Passion fruit (Passiflora edulis f. flavicarpa) in Casanare, Colombia

Passiflora edulis, commonly known as passion fruit, is a vine species of passionflower native to South America. In Colombia, yellow passion fruit (P. edulis f. flavicarpa) is the most important species in terms of net production and local consumption. Recently two brevipalpus transmitted cileviruses...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inPlant disease
Main Authors Roy, Avijit, Guillermo, Leon M, Nunziata, Schyler, Padmanabhan, Chellappan, Rivera, Yazmin, Brlansky, Ronald H, Hartung, John
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.07.2023
Subjects
Online AccessGet more information
ISSN0191-2917
DOI10.1094/PDIS-09-22-2267-PDN

Cover

Loading…
Abstract Passiflora edulis, commonly known as passion fruit, is a vine species of passionflower native to South America. In Colombia, yellow passion fruit (P. edulis f. flavicarpa) is the most important species in terms of net production and local consumption. Recently two brevipalpus transmitted cileviruses, (i) passion fruit green spot virus (PfGSV) and (ii) hibiscus strain of citrus leprosis virus C2 (CiLV-C2H) were detected in passion fruit in Brazil and Hawaii, respectively (Ramos-González et al., 2020, Olmedo-Velarde et al., 2022). CiLV-C2H infects both citrus and hibiscus in Colombia (Roy et al., 2015, 2018) but there was no report of PfGSV elsewhere apart from Brazil and Paraguay (Costa-Rodrigues et al., 2022). Apart from emerging begomovirus diseases, five major viruses are known to infect passion fruit in Colombia: soybean mosaic virus (SMV), cowpea aphid-borne mosaic virus, passion fruit yellow mosaic virus, cucumber mosaic virus, and a tentative Gulupa bacilliform badnavirus A (Cardona et al., 2022). Current findings of CiLV-C2H in passion fruit and PfGSV in hibiscus motivated us to investigate the possibilities of cilevirus infection in passion fruit in Colombia. During surveys, along with healthy yellow passion fruit leaves, five symptomatic plant samples from Meta and three from Casanare were collected before sent to the Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory at Beltsville, MD under APHIS permit. Passion fruit samples from Meta showed leaf mottling, rugose mosaic, and leaf distortion, whereas leaf variegation, chlorotic spots, yellowing, green spots in senescent leaves and green vein banding were observed in the Casanare samples (Supp. Fig. 1). Total RNA was extracted using RNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen, USA). To know the potential cilevirus infection in these samples, three PfGSV specific (Ramos-González et al. 2020) and a CiLV-C2 generic primer pairs (Olmedo-Velarde et al. 2021) were used in the RT-PCR assays. All five passion fruit samples from Meta failed to produce either CiLV-C2 or CiLV-C2H or PfGSV amplicon whereas all three Casanare samples successfully amplified 321, 244 and 299 nts of PfGSV-RNA1 and -RNA2 amplicons using C13F/C13R, C6F/C6R and C8F/C8R primers, respectively. Bi-directional amplicon sequencing followed by BlastN analysis revealed ≥99% nt identity with the PfGSV-RNA1 (MK804173) and -RNA2 (MK804174) genome sequences. An optimized ribo-depleted library preparation protocol was utilized to prepare two cDNA libraries using the RNA extracts of a PfGSV suspected positive (Casanare) and a negative (Meta) samples (Chellappan et al., 2022). HTS libraries of Casanare and Meta samples resulted in 22.7 to 29.5 million raw reads, respectively. After adapter trimming and filtering, clean reads were mapped to the Arabidopsis thaliana reference genome and unmapped reads were de novo assembled (Chellappan et al., 2022). BlastN analysis from the assembled contigs identified 1-3 contigs corresponding to PfGSV-RNA1 and -RNA2, respectively, from Casanare sample whereas 3 contigs of SMV were identified in Meta passion fruit sample. No other virus sequence was obtained from either of the libraries. Assembled contigs covered 99.33% of the RNA1 and 94.42% of the RNA2 genome, with read depths of 64,474 and 119,549, respectively. Meta sample contigs (OP564897) covered >99% of the SMV genome, which shared >99% nt identity with the Colombian SMV isolates (KY249378, MW655827). Both RNA-1 (OP564895) and -2 (OP564896) segments of the Casanare isolate shared 99% nt identity with PfGSV isolate (MK804173-74). Our discovery identified PfGSV in Colombia, for the first-time outside Brazil and Paraguay. The findings of PfGSV in yellow passion fruit increases the potential threat and possibility of PfGSV movement via Brevipalpus sp. from passion fruit to other hosts.
AbstractList Passiflora edulis, commonly known as passion fruit, is a vine species of passionflower native to South America. In Colombia, yellow passion fruit (P. edulis f. flavicarpa) is the most important species in terms of net production and local consumption. Recently two brevipalpus transmitted cileviruses, (i) passion fruit green spot virus (PfGSV) and (ii) hibiscus strain of citrus leprosis virus C2 (CiLV-C2H) were detected in passion fruit in Brazil and Hawaii, respectively (Ramos-González et al., 2020, Olmedo-Velarde et al., 2022). CiLV-C2H infects both citrus and hibiscus in Colombia (Roy et al., 2015, 2018) but there was no report of PfGSV elsewhere apart from Brazil and Paraguay (Costa-Rodrigues et al., 2022). Apart from emerging begomovirus diseases, five major viruses are known to infect passion fruit in Colombia: soybean mosaic virus (SMV), cowpea aphid-borne mosaic virus, passion fruit yellow mosaic virus, cucumber mosaic virus, and a tentative Gulupa bacilliform badnavirus A (Cardona et al., 2022). Current findings of CiLV-C2H in passion fruit and PfGSV in hibiscus motivated us to investigate the possibilities of cilevirus infection in passion fruit in Colombia. During surveys, along with healthy yellow passion fruit leaves, five symptomatic plant samples from Meta and three from Casanare were collected before sent to the Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory at Beltsville, MD under APHIS permit. Passion fruit samples from Meta showed leaf mottling, rugose mosaic, and leaf distortion, whereas leaf variegation, chlorotic spots, yellowing, green spots in senescent leaves and green vein banding were observed in the Casanare samples (Supp. Fig. 1). Total RNA was extracted using RNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen, USA). To know the potential cilevirus infection in these samples, three PfGSV specific (Ramos-González et al. 2020) and a CiLV-C2 generic primer pairs (Olmedo-Velarde et al. 2021) were used in the RT-PCR assays. All five passion fruit samples from Meta failed to produce either CiLV-C2 or CiLV-C2H or PfGSV amplicon whereas all three Casanare samples successfully amplified 321, 244 and 299 nts of PfGSV-RNA1 and -RNA2 amplicons using C13F/C13R, C6F/C6R and C8F/C8R primers, respectively. Bi-directional amplicon sequencing followed by BlastN analysis revealed ≥99% nt identity with the PfGSV-RNA1 (MK804173) and -RNA2 (MK804174) genome sequences. An optimized ribo-depleted library preparation protocol was utilized to prepare two cDNA libraries using the RNA extracts of a PfGSV suspected positive (Casanare) and a negative (Meta) samples (Chellappan et al., 2022). HTS libraries of Casanare and Meta samples resulted in 22.7 to 29.5 million raw reads, respectively. After adapter trimming and filtering, clean reads were mapped to the Arabidopsis thaliana reference genome and unmapped reads were de novo assembled (Chellappan et al., 2022). BlastN analysis from the assembled contigs identified 1-3 contigs corresponding to PfGSV-RNA1 and -RNA2, respectively, from Casanare sample whereas 3 contigs of SMV were identified in Meta passion fruit sample. No other virus sequence was obtained from either of the libraries. Assembled contigs covered 99.33% of the RNA1 and 94.42% of the RNA2 genome, with read depths of 64,474 and 119,549, respectively. Meta sample contigs (OP564897) covered >99% of the SMV genome, which shared >99% nt identity with the Colombian SMV isolates (KY249378, MW655827). Both RNA-1 (OP564895) and -2 (OP564896) segments of the Casanare isolate shared 99% nt identity with PfGSV isolate (MK804173-74). Our discovery identified PfGSV in Colombia, for the first-time outside Brazil and Paraguay. The findings of PfGSV in yellow passion fruit increases the potential threat and possibility of PfGSV movement via Brevipalpus sp. from passion fruit to other hosts.
Author Brlansky, Ronald H
Guillermo, Leon M
Rivera, Yazmin
Roy, Avijit
Nunziata, Schyler
Padmanabhan, Chellappan
Hartung, John
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Avijit
  surname: Roy
  fullname: Roy, Avijit
  email: avijit.roy@usda.gov
  organization: USDA Agricultural Research Service, 17123, Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory, Building 004, Room 117, BARC-West, 10300 Baltimore Avenue, Washington, District of Columbia, United States, 20250; avijit.roy@usda.gov
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Leon M
  surname: Guillermo
  fullname: Guillermo, Leon M
  email: gleon@agrosavia.co
  organization: AGROSAVIA, 70126, Centro de Investigación La Libertad. Km.17 vía Pto. Lopez. Villavicencio, Bogota, Meta, Colombia; gleon@agrosavia.co
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Schyler
  surname: Nunziata
  fullname: Nunziata, Schyler
  email: schyler.o.nunziata@usda.gov
  organization: USDA APHIS PPQ, Science and Technology, Plant Pathogen Confirmatory Diagnostics Laboratory, Laurel, Maryland, United States; schyler.o.nunziata@usda.gov
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Chellappan
  surname: Padmanabhan
  fullname: Padmanabhan, Chellappan
  email: Chellappan.Padmanabhan@usda.gov
  organization: USDA APHIS , PPCDL, USDA APHIS PPQ, Science and Technology, Bldg 580, BARC-East,, 9901 Powder Mill Road, Laurel, Maryland, United States, 20708; Chellappan.Padmanabhan@usda.gov
– sequence: 5
  givenname: Yazmin
  surname: Rivera
  fullname: Rivera, Yazmin
  email: yazmin.rivera@usda.gov
  organization: USDA, Animal Plant Health Inspection Service; Plant Protection and Quarantine, Science and Technology, Plant Pathogen Confirmatory Diagnostics Laboratory, Plant Pathogen Confirmatory Diagnostics Laboratory, 9901 Powder Mill Rd, Laurel, Maryland, United States, 20705; yazmin.rivera@usda.gov
– sequence: 6
  givenname: Ronald H
  surname: Brlansky
  fullname: Brlansky, Ronald H
  email: rhby@ufl.edu
  organization: University of Florida Citrus Research and Education Center, 57513, Department of Plant Pathology, Lake Alfred, Florida, United States; rhby@ufl.edu
– sequence: 7
  givenname: John
  surname: Hartung
  fullname: Hartung, John
  email: john.s.hartung@gmail.com
  organization: USDA-ARS BARC, 57604, Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland, United States; john.s.hartung@gmail.com
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36471457$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
BookMark eNpdkE1LAzEYhHOo2Fr9BYLkqGBqNsluskfZWi0ULajn8m42kUi6WZLdSi_-dr8vwsAw8Mwc5giN2tAahE4zOstoKa7W8-UjoSVh7FOFJOv5_QhNaFZmhJWZHKOjlF4ppUIU6hCNeSFkJnI5Qe8LF1OPo-lC7HGweA0pudBiGwfX45doTItTF3q8c3FI2LV4b7wPb__A8-9ofYiATTN4l7CdYeth5zTEDi6-mhUkaCGaS1wFH7a1g2N0YMEnc_LrU_S8uHmq7sjq4XZZXa-I5lz1pG6sltooyZWwueGipEoVjRBM59TIUtJCg61rYXKpOQgqVaYtMNqUPK9BsCk6-9nthnprmk0X3RbifvN3BPsAeBlikA
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1080_23311932_2024_2388570
crossref_primary_10_31910_rudca_v27_n1_2024_2364
crossref_primary_10_3390_biology13100839
crossref_primary_10_3390_v17030383
ContentType Journal Article
DBID NPM
DOI 10.1094/PDIS-09-22-2267-PDN
DatabaseName PubMed
DatabaseTitle PubMed
DatabaseTitleList PubMed
Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: NPM
  name: PubMed
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed
  sourceTypes: Index Database
DeliveryMethod no_fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Agriculture
ExternalDocumentID 36471457
Genre Journal Article
GroupedDBID ..I
123
2WC
53G
AAHBH
ABOGM
ACBTR
ACIWK
ADNWM
AENEX
AFRAH
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
CS3
DU5
E3Z
EBS
EJD
FRP
HYO
L7B
NPM
OK1
P2P
RPS
TR2
TWZ
UKR
WH7
~KM
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c338t-bdfc7ce87384f5e3490886d442c50e79706cafbb4e57c3a40781cfa20d935ba42
ISSN 0191-2917
IngestDate Mon Jul 21 06:07:49 EDT 2025
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Keywords Brevipalpus transmitted viruses
Cilevirus
Fruit
High-throughput sequencing
Techniques
Crop Type
Pathogen detection
Causal Agent
Viruses and viroids
Subject Areas
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c338t-bdfc7ce87384f5e3490886d442c50e79706cafbb4e57c3a40781cfa20d935ba42
PMID 36471457
ParticipantIDs pubmed_primary_36471457
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2023-07-01
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2023-07-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 07
  year: 2023
  text: 2023-07-01
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 2020
PublicationPlace United States
PublicationPlace_xml – name: United States
PublicationTitle Plant disease
PublicationTitleAlternate Plant Dis
PublicationYear 2023
SSID ssj0004468
Score 2.4126484
Snippet Passiflora edulis, commonly known as passion fruit, is a vine species of passionflower native to South America. In Colombia, yellow passion fruit (P. edulis f....
SourceID pubmed
SourceType Index Database
Title First report of Passion fruit green spot virus in yellow Passion fruit (Passiflora edulis f. flavicarpa) in Casanare, Colombia
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36471457
hasFullText
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1Lb9QwELa2IKFyQLzfyAcOoJDtJrHj9XHVUgpCqxVtpd4qP9ug3TTaJkXtgRM_nLHz2FUo4nGJItsbWfm-eGfG34wReg1_2UZzBeQ1PA0J2AAhZzICLyVlREVcx9ZX-5yme4fk0xE9Ggx-rKmWqlIO1dW1eSX_gyq0Aa4uS_YfkO0eCg1wD_jCFRCG619hvJuB7daE_b2YTThNax7YZZWVwYmT1ATgtpbBRbasvPD10u21fOsNBCPTN1jw3YWr5TrPzgM7DOxcwDoiloVwsQOXHijORS7qqPU2rJoLmYl169adgFT293y-1NG-yUX2Nes0Nh8qn4O48IHazwam0kWAplV-BXzxRu2-Or2cr_TDM6Gd2laeikYq4KRbRdEQvIldxEmnc-3CmTwKY15nb_6ymIPnCQjMdj7uO4EGOM1gKrJwtjNdHw2IFAuPr6uEHxHK_tzbq7Dddm2gDfA13OGpLuLT5tYSn07ZzbStXMXJ1jUz20S32qf1_BRvrxzcRXcaRwNPatbcQwOT30e3JyfLptiKeYC-e_7gmj_4zOKGFtjTAnv-YMcf7PmDsxzX_OkNfLNiD67Zg-0Qr9jz1v2y5c473DLnITrcfX-wvRc253GEKknGZSi1VUyZMUvGxFKTeI1cqgmJFR0ZxtkoVcJKSQxlKhFuhzhSVsQjzRMqBYkfoRv5WW6eIEw01bG2I6II-BRUcEWUsalIKFE8ouIpely_vOOiLrpy3L7WZ7_teY42Vxx7gW5a-MrNSzAZS_nKY_oTVwNrJQ
linkProvider National Library of Medicine
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=First+report+of+Passion+fruit+green+spot+virus+in+yellow+Passion+fruit+%28Passiflora+edulis+f.+flavicarpa%29+in+Casanare%2C+Colombia&rft.jtitle=Plant+disease&rft.au=Roy%2C+Avijit&rft.au=Guillermo%2C+Leon+M&rft.au=Nunziata%2C+Schyler&rft.au=Padmanabhan%2C+Chellappan&rft.date=2023-07-01&rft.issn=0191-2917&rft_id=info:doi/10.1094%2FPDIS-09-22-2267-PDN&rft_id=info%3Apmid%2F36471457&rft_id=info%3Apmid%2F36471457&rft.externalDocID=36471457
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0191-2917&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0191-2917&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0191-2917&client=summon