The global phylogeny of Plum pox virus is emerging
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Hajizadeh, Mohammad
Gibbs, Adrian
Amirnia, Fahimeh
Glasa, Miroslav
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Society for General Microbiology
Abstract
The 206 complete genomic sequences of Plum pox virus in GenBank (January 2019) were downloaded. Their main open reading
frames (ORF)s were compared by phylogenetic and population genetic methods. All fell into the nine previously recognized
strain clusters; the PPV-Rec and PPV-T strain ORFs were all recombinants, whereas most of those in the PPV-C, PPV-CR,
PPV-CV, PPV-D, PPV-EA, PPV-M and PPV-W strain clusters were not. The strain clusters ranged in size from 2 (PPV-CV and
PPV-EA) to 74 (PPV-D). The isolates of eight of the nine strains came solely from Europe and the Levant (with an exception
resulting from a quarantine breach), but many PPV-D strain isolates also came from east and south Asia and the Americas. The
estimated time to the most recent common ancestor (TMRCA) of all 134 non-recombinant ORFs was 820 (865–775) BCE. Most
strain populations were only a few decades old, and had small intra-strain, but large inter-strain, differences; strain PPV-W was
the oldest. Eurasia is clearly the ‘centre of emergence’ of PPV and the several PPV-D strain populations found elsewhere only
show evidence of gene flow with Europe, so have come from separate introductions from Europe. All ORFs and their individual
genes show evidence of strong negative selection, except the positively selected pipo gene of the recently migrant populations.
The possible ancient origins of PPV are discussed.
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Journal of General Virology
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2037-12-31