Cacao Theobroma cacao L. (Malvaceae) is an economically important crop cultivated in tropical climates for the bean from which chocolate and other products are made (Zarrillo et al., 2018). Virus-like… Click to show full abstract
Cacao Theobroma cacao L. (Malvaceae) is an economically important crop cultivated in tropical climates for the bean from which chocolate and other products are made (Zarrillo et al., 2018). Virus-like symptoms consisting of discoloration, leaf distortion with downward rolling of leaves, and yellow speckling or mottling (Fig. S1), were observed in imported cacao germplasm at the USDA-ARS-SHRS cacao quarantine facilities in the fall of 2020. Total RNA was isolated from leaves collected from four symptomatic plants using silica RNA extraction method (Rott and Jelkmann, 2001). Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)-depleted RNA samples were used for cDNA library construction, followed by high throughput sequencing on Illumina® NovaSeq 6000 platform (Novogene Corp., Sacramento, CA). Quality-filtered, 150-bp paired-ended reads (2,601,293-3,104,474) were assembled de novo using SPAdes v.3.14.1 (Nurk et al., 2013). The contigs (200,799 to 276,851) were queried against the NCBI virus reference sequence (RefSeq) database using the discontiguous megablast algorithm (https://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi?). The resultant contigs (n=1,344) were 150-nt to 1463-nt in length (k-mer coverage from 6.3x to 26,721.7x) and shared their highest nucleotide (nt) identity with potato leafroll virus (PLRV; NC_001747; genus Polerovirus; family Solemoviridae), at 69.1%-72.8%. The contigs pooled from the four samples were assembled into 15 scaffolds. BLASTn analyses of the 15 scaffolds against the RefSeq database indicated the best matches were to thirteen other polerovirus species, with top hits to cereal yellow dwarf virus-RPV (D10206) and pepper vein yellows virus (LC528383), having similarity scores of 66.2% and 100% respectively. The 15 scaffolds matched to the 5' terminal end, ORF1-2, ORF3, ORF4 and ORF3-5 of the different polerovirus genomes. For confirmatory sequencing, total RNA was subjected to reverse transcription using SuperScript IV (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), followed by RT-PCR amplification with general polerovirus primers PoconF/PoconcpR (Xiang et al., 2008) expected to yield an amplicon of ~1,400-bp located at the 3' end of the RNA-dependent, RNA polymerase (RdRp), including the complete coat protein (CP) and movement protein (MP) genes. Amplicons were ligated to pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega, Madison, WI) and sequenced bi-directionally by Sanger sequencing (Eton Bio, Research Triangle Park, NC). BLASTn analysis of the polerovirus-like nt sequences (GenBank accession nos. (ON745771-ON745774) indicated the closest relatives were potato leafroll virus (OK058524) and cucumber aphid-borne yellows virus (FJ460218), at 71% and 73%, respectively. The CP amino acid (aa) sequence shared the greatest similarity to cereal yellow dwarf virus RPV (NP_840023), at 53%, and the MP aa sequence shared the greatest aa similarity to wheat yellow leaf dwarf virus-GPV (YP_003029842), at 38%. These results provide robust support for the association of a previously undescribed polerovirus with symptomatic cacao trees, herein named, cacao leafroll virus (Solemoviridae; Polerovirus). Although Koch's postulates have not been completed to confirm causality, the presence of this virus in cacao germplasm undermine efforts to distribute pathogen-free germplasm and may pose a risk to cacao production in trees established from virus-infected plant material. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a polerovirus infecting cacao trees. All trees of these accessions at the quarantined facility in Miami, FL have been destroyed.
               
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