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    Assessment of yam mild mosaic virus coat protein gene sequence diversity reveals the prevalence of cosmopolitan and African group of isolates in Ghana and Nigeria

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    Journal Article (1.165Mb)
    Authors
    Nkere, C.K.
    Otto, E.
    Atiri, G.I.
    Onyeka, J.
    Silva, G.
    Bömer, M.
    Seal, S.E.
    Kumar, P. Lava
    Date Issued
    2020-09
    Date Online
    2020-05
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    CC-BY-4.0
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Nkere, C.K., Otto, E., Atiri, G.I., Onyeka, J., Silva, G., Bömer, M., ... & Kumar, P.L. (2020). Assessment of yam mild mosaic virus coat protein gene sequence diversity reveals the prevalence of cosmopolitan and African group of isolates in Ghana and Nigeria. Current Plant Biology, 23: 100156, 1-6.
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/119319
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpb.2020.100156
    Abstract/Description
    This study analyzed the genetic diversity of 18 Yam mild mosaic virus (YMMV, genus Potyvirus) isolates collected from field surveys in Ghana (N = 8) and Nigeria (N = 10) in 2012−13. The full coat protein (CP) encoding region of the virus genome was sequenced and used for comparison and phylogenetic analysis of the YMMV isolates available in the NCBI nucleotide database. The mean nucleotide (nt) diversity was 13.4% among the 18 isolates (17 from D. alata and one from D. rotundata), 11.4% within the isolates of Ghana and 7.4% within the isolates of Nigeria. The phylogenetic clustering of the 18 YMMV isolates did not show correlation with the country of origin, and they aligned with the reference sequences of four of the 11 YMMV monophyletic groups representing the cosmopolitan group and the African group of YMMV isolates. High sequence homology of 99% between the YMMV sequence from Nigeria (CP12-DaN6-1) and a previously reported sequence from Togo (GenBank Accession Number AF548514) suggests a prevalence of seed-borne virus spread within the region. Understanding YMMV sequence diversity in West Africa aid in the improvement of diagnostic assays necessary for virus indexing and seed certification.
    CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
    Nkere C. K.https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1212-0785
    P. Lava Kumarhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-4388-6510
    CGIAR Action Areas
    Genetic Innovation
    CGIAR Impact Areas
    Nutrition, health and food security; Poverty reduction, livelihoods and jobs
    Other CGIAR Affiliations
    Maize; Roots, Tubers and Bananas
    Contributes to SDGs
    SDG 1 - No poverty; SDG 2 - Zero hunger
    AGROVOC Keywords
    yams; dioscorea; viruses; ghana; nigeria; genetic variation
    Subjects
    AGRONOMY; DISEASE CONTROL; FOOD SECURITY; GENETIC IMPROVEMENT; PLANT BREEDING; PLANT DISEASES; PLANT GENETIC RESOURCES; PLANT HEALTH; PLANT PRODUCTION; YAM
    Countries
    Ghana; Nigeria
    Regions
    Africa; Western Africa
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    International Institute of Tropical Agriculture; University of Ibadan; National Root Crops Research Institute, Nigeria; Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Ghana; University of Greenwich
    Investors/sponsors
    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
    Collections
    • IITA Journal Articles [4999]

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