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Geminivirus strain demarcation and nomenclature

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TLDR
The status of geminivirus species and strain demarcation is reviewed as well as providing updated isolate descriptors for a total of 672 begomovirus isolates, and several others previously classified as “strains” have been upgraded to “species”.
Abstract
Geminivirus taxonomy and nomenclature is growing in complexity with the number of genomic sequences deposited in sequence databases Taxonomic and nomenclatural updates are published at regular intervals (Fauquet et al in Arch Virol 145:1743–1761, 2000, Arch Virol 148:405–421, 2003) A system to standardize virus names, and corresponding guidelines, has been proposed (Fauquet et al in Arch Virol 145:1743–1761, 2000) This system is now followed by a large number of geminivirologists in the world, making geminivirus nomenclature more transparent and useful In 2003, due to difficulties inherent in species identification, the ICTV Geminiviridae Study Group proposed new species demarcation criteria, the most important of which being an 89% nucleotide (nt) identity threshold between full-length DNA-A component nucleotide sequences for begomovirus species This threshold has been utilised since with general satisfaction More recently, an article has been published to clarify the terminology used to describe virus entities below the species level [5] The present publication is proposing demarcation criteria and guidelines to classify and name geminiviruses below the species level Using the Clustal V algorithm (DNAStar MegAlign software), the distribution of pairwise sequence comparisons, for pairs of sequences below the species taxonomic level, identified two peaks: one at 85–94% nt identity that is proposed to correspond to “strain” comparisons and one at 92–100% identity that corresponds to “variant” comparisons Guidelines for descriptors for each of these levels are proposed to standardize nomenclature under the species level In this publication we review the status of geminivirus species and strain demarcation as well as providing updated isolate descriptors for a total of 672 begomovirus isolates As a consequence, we have revised the status of some virus isolates to classify them as “strains”, whereas several others previously classified as “strains” have been upgraded to “species” In all other respects, the classification system has remained robust, and we therefore propose to continue using it An updated list of all geminivirus isolates and a phylogenetic tree with one representative isolate per species are provided

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Identification and Molecular Characterization of a New Geminivirus Betasatellite Infecting Malvastrum coromandelianum in China

TL;DR: According to the proposed species demarcation threshold of betasatellites (78% nucleotide identity), this molecule is a novel betasatellite species, for which the name Malvastrum leaf curl Guangdong betas satellite (MLCuGdB) is proposed.

RNA silencing suppression activity encoded by plant-infecting DNA satellites from Africa

Mi Zhou
TL;DR: The results showed that both of theAlpha-Rep proteins can suppress RNA silencing, and that the Alpha-Rep protein of ALCCMA has much stronger suppression activity than that of OYCrCMA.

Molecular characterization of a novel monopartite begomovirus isolated from Pouzolzia zeylanica in China

TL;DR: Results indicate that isolate TY01 is a member of a novel Begomovirus species, for which the name ''Pouzolzia golden mosaic virus'' (PGMV) is proposed.
Book ChapterDOI

Small RNA-mediated begomoviral resistance in plants: Micro in size but mega in function

TL;DR: This chapter overviews the current status of different genera of family Geminiviridae, discusses the roles of silencing suppressor genes of begomoviruses and associated satellites in silencing pathways, and describes the mode of action and functions of different types of small RNAs in various silenced pathways.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Possible emergence of new geminiviruses by frequent recombination.

TL;DR: Geminiviruses are a group of plant viruses characterized by a genome of circular single-stranded DNA encapsidated in twinned quasi-isometric particles and recombination is very frequent and occurs between species and within and across genera.
Journal ArticleDOI

Revision of taxonomic criteria for species demarcation in the family Geminiviridae, and an updated list of begomovirus species.

TL;DR: Members of the family Geminiviridae characteristically have circular single-stranded DNAgenomes packaged within twinned (so-called geminate) particles that cause yield losses to many crop plants throughout the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Revising the way we conceive and name viruses below the species level: a review of geminivirus taxonomy calls for new standardized isolate descriptors.

TL;DR: The status of geminivirus species demarcation and nomenclature is reviewed for a total of 389 isolates and the need for a better description of virus isolates is recognized to elevate them to “strains”.
Journal ArticleDOI

Guidelines to the demarcation of virus species

TL;DR: This research attacked the mode of action of the immune system by targeting the “spatially aggregating immune checkpoints” in response to the presence of E.coli.
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