Frequent Migration of Introduced Cucurbit-Infecting Begomoviruses among Middle Eastern Countries

MSShtayeh's picture
Journal Title, Volume, Page: 
Virology Journal 2014, 11:181 doi:10.1186/1743-422X-11-181 Published: 9 October 2014
Year of Publication: 
2014
Authors: 
Moshe Lapidot
Dana Gelbart
Amit Gal-On
Noa Sela
Ghandi Anfoka
Fatima Haj Ahmed
Yusuf Abou-Jawada
Hana Sobh
Hamed Mazyad
Aboul-Ata E Aboul-Ata
Ahmed Kamal El-Attar
Mohammed S Ali-Shtayeh
Current Affiliation: 
Department of Biology and Biotechnology, Faculty of Science, An-Najah National University, Nablus, Palestine
Rana M Jamous
Jane E Polston
Siobain Duffy
Preferred Abstract (Original): 

Background In the early 2000s, two cucurbit-infecting begomoviruses were introduced into the eastern Mediterranean basin: the Old World Squash leaf curl virus (SLCV) and the New World Watermelon chlorotic stunt virus (WmCSV). These viruses have been emerging in parallel over the last decade in Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon and Palestine.
Methods We explored this unique situation by assessing the diversity and biogeography of the DNA-A component of SLCV and WmCSV in these five countries.
Results There was fairly low sequence variation in both begomovirus species (SLCV ??=?0.0077; WmCSV ??=?0.0066). Both viruses may have been introduced only once into the eastern Mediterranean basin, but once established, these viruses readily moved across country boundaries. SLCV has been introduced at least twice into each of all five countries based on the absence of monophyletic clades. Similarly, WmCSV has been introduced multiple times into Jordan, Israel and Palestine.
Conclusions We predict that uncontrolled movement of whiteflies among countries in this region will continue to cause SLCV and WmCSV migration, preventing strong genetic differentiation of these viruses among these countries.

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