CIRAD, UMR PVBMT, F-97410 St Pierre, La Réunion, France.
Department of Plant Pathology, Ohio State University, OARDC, Wooster, OH, United States; CIRAD, UMR BGPI, Montpellier, France; BGPI, Univ. Montpellier, CIRAD, INRA, Montpellier SupAgro, Montpellier, France.
Adv Virus Res. 2018;101:55-83. doi: 10.1016/bs.aivir.2018.02.003. Epub 2018 May 7.
The number of plant viruses that are known likely remains only a vanishingly small fraction of all extant plant virus species. Consequently, the distribution and population dynamics of plant viruses within even the best-studied ecosystems have only ever been studied for small groups of virus species. Even for the best studied of these groups very little is known about virus diversity at spatial scales ranging from an individual host, through individual local host populations to global host populations. To date, metagenomics studies that have assessed the collective or metagenomes of viruses at the ecosystem scale have revealed many previously unrecognized viral species. More recently, novel georeferenced metagenomics approaches have been devised that can precisely link individual sequence reads to both the plant hosts from which they were obtained, and the spatial arrangements of these hosts. Besides illuminating the diversity and the distribution of plant viruses at the ecosystem scale, application of these "geometagenomics" approaches has enabled the direct testing of hypotheses relating to the impacts of host diversity, host spatial variations, and environmental conditions on plant virus diversity and prevalence. To exemplify how such top-down approaches can provide a far deeper understanding of host-virus associations, we provide a case-study focusing on geminiviruses within two complex ecosystems containing both cultivated and uncultivated areas. Geminiviruses are a highly relevant model for studying the evolutionary and ecological aspects of viral emergence because the family Geminiviridae includes many of the most important crop pathogens that have emerged over the past century. In addition to revealing unprecedented degrees of geminivirus diversity within the analyzed ecosystems, the geometagenomics-based approach enabled the focused in-depth analysis of the complex evolutionary dynamics of some of the highly divergent geminivirus species that were discovered.
已知的植物病毒数量可能只是所有现存植物病毒物种的一小部分。因此,即使在研究最好的生态系统中,植物病毒的分布和种群动态也只针对少数几种病毒进行了研究。即使对于这些研究得最好的病毒组,对于从单个宿主到单个局部宿主种群再到全球宿主种群的空间尺度上的病毒多样性也知之甚少。迄今为止,在生态系统尺度上评估病毒集体或宏基因组的宏基因组学研究揭示了许多以前未被识别的病毒物种。最近,设计了新的具有地理参考的宏基因组学方法,可以将单个序列读取精确链接到它们所来自的植物宿主,以及这些宿主的空间排列。除了阐明生态系统尺度上植物病毒的多样性和分布外,这些“地理宏基因组学”方法的应用还能够直接检验与宿主多样性、宿主空间变化和环境条件对植物病毒多样性和流行程度的影响有关的假设。为了说明这种自上而下的方法如何能够更深入地了解宿主-病毒的关联,我们提供了一个案例研究,重点是两个包含栽培和未栽培区域的复杂生态系统中的双生病毒。双生病毒是研究病毒出现的进化和生态方面的一个非常相关的模型,因为双生病毒科包括许多在过去一个世纪中出现的最重要的作物病原体。除了揭示分析的生态系统中前所未有的双生病毒多样性程度之外,基于地理宏基因组学的方法还能够深入分析所发现的一些高度分化的双生病毒物种的复杂进化动态。