Rakotomalala Mbolarinosy, Vrancken Bram, Pinel-Galzi Agnès, Ramavovololona Perle, Hébrard Eugénie, Randrianangaly Jean Stéphan, Dellicour Simon, Lemey Philippe, Fargette Denis
Centre Régional de Recherche du Nord-Ouest du FOFIFA, BP 289, Mahavoky Avaratra, Mahajanga 401, Madagascar.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Laboratory for Clinical and Epidemiological Virology, Rega Institute, KU Leuven, Herestraat 49 box 1040, 3000 Leuven, Belgium.
Virus Evol. 2019 Aug 1;5(2):vez023. doi: 10.1093/ve/vez023. eCollection 2019 Jul.
(RYMV) in Madagascar Island provides an opportunity to study the spread of a plant virus disease after a relatively recent introduction in a large and isolated country with a heterogeneous host landscape ecology. Here, we take advantage of field survey data on the occurrence of RYMV disease throughout Madagascar dating back to the 1970s, and of virus genetic data from ninety-four isolates collected since 1989 in most regions of the country to reconstruct the epidemic history. We find that the Malagasy isolates belong to a unique recombinant strain that most likely entered Madagascar through a long-distance introduction from the most eastern part of mainland Africa. We infer the spread of RYMV as a continuous process using a Bayesian statistical framework. In order to calibrate the time scale in calendar time units in this analysis, we pool the information about the RYMV evolutionary rate from several geographical partitions. Whereas the field surveys and the phylogeographic reconstructions both point to a rapid southward invasion across hundreds of kilometers throughout Madagascar within three to four decades, they differ on the inferred origin location and time of the epidemic. The phylogeographic reconstructions suggest a lineage displacement and unveil a re-invasion of the northern regions that may have remained unnoticed otherwise. Despite ecological differences that could affect the transmission potential of RYMV in Madagascar and in mainland Africa, we estimate similar invasion and dispersal rates. We could not identify environmental factors that have a relevant impact on the lineage dispersal velocity of RYMV in Madagascar. This study highlights the value and complementarity of (historical) nongenetic and (more contemporaneous) genetic surveillance data for reconstructing the history of spread of plant viruses.
马达加斯加岛的水稻黄斑驳病毒(RYMV)为研究一种植物病毒病在一个幅员辽阔且与世隔绝、宿主景观生态多样的国家相对近期传入后的传播情况提供了契机。在此,我们利用了可追溯至20世纪70年代的马达加斯加全岛RYMV病害发生情况的实地调查数据,以及自1989年以来在该国大部分地区收集的94个分离株的病毒基因数据,来重建疫情历史。我们发现马达加斯加分离株属于一个独特的重组菌株,极有可能是从非洲大陆最东部经远距离传入马达加斯加的。我们使用贝叶斯统计框架推断RYMV的传播是一个连续过程。为了在此分析中以日历时间单位校准时间尺度,我们汇总了来自几个地理分区的关于RYMV进化速率的信息。尽管实地调查和系统发育地理学重建均表明在三到四十年间RYMV迅速向南侵袭了马达加斯加数百公里的区域,但它们在推断的疫情起源地点和时间上存在差异。系统发育地理学重建表明存在谱系替代,并揭示了北部地区可能未被注意到的再次入侵情况。尽管生态差异可能会影响RYMV在马达加斯加和非洲大陆的传播潜力,但我们估计其入侵和扩散速率相似。我们无法确定对RYMV在马达加斯加的谱系扩散速度有相关影响的环境因素。这项研究突出了(历史)非基因监测数据和(更具时效性的)基因监测数据在重建植物病毒传播历史方面的价值和互补性。