Viruses, Vol. 17, Pages 457: Phylogeographic History of Tomato Chlorosis Virus
Viruses doi: 10.3390/v17040457
Authors:
Kangcheng Wu
Shiwei Zhang
Wende Huang
Zhenguo Du
Fangluan Gao
Xiayu Guan
Tomato chlorosis virus (ToCV), first reported in Florida, USA, in 1998, has since emerged in multiple regions worldwide, posing a significant threat to global tomato production. However, its origin, migration patterns, and evolutionary history remain poorly understood. In this study, we used Bayesian phylogeographic analysis of coat protein gene sequences from 155 ToCV isolates to reconstruct its phylogeographic history. Our results show that ToCV evolves at a rate of 6.24 × 10−4 subs/site/year (95% credibility interval: 4.35 × 10−4–8.28 × 10−4), with the most recent common ancestor dating back to 1882. The maximum clade credibility (MCC) tree revealed three major clades, with Clade 1—whose most recent common ancestor dates to approximately 1975—comprising over 90% of the isolates. Although the exact origin of ToCV remains uncertain, we identified five distinct migration pathways: one from Europe to the Americas, one from Europe to South Asia, one from the Middle East to East Asia, one from East Asia to mainland China, and one from mainland China to Europe. These findings underscore the complex global spread of ToCV and suggest that multiple geographic areas have contributed to its ongoing evolution and dissemination.
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Kangcheng Wu www.mdpi.com