Viruses have the ability to frequently colonize new hosts and ecological niches because of their inherently high genetic and evolutionary plasticity. However, a virus may emerge and remain of no or less economic importance until changes in viral and/or environmental factors dictate its epidemiological status. An example is sweet potato mild mottle virus (SPMMV), which was first reported in the 1970s on sweetpotatoes in eastern Africa, has remained endemic in the region and poorly understood, yet accounting for 60-95% losses especially in mixed infections. Unlike other sweetpotato viruses which have a global incidence, SPMMV has never been confirmed outside eastern Africa. This implicates the region as its center of origin, but does not fully account for SPMMV’s exclusive geographic delimitation to eastern Africa. Despite its importance, several mysteries and research gaps surround SPMMV, which decelerate efforts for effective virus disease management in sweetpotato. The aim of this review is to articulate research gaps, propose pivotal scientific directions and stimulate knowledge generation for better management of virus diseases in sweetpotato. Vector-mediated transmission of SPMMV remains enigmatic. Here we postulate testable hypotheses to explain SPMMV transmission. Comparisons between SPMMV and cassava brown streak ipomoviruses demonstrate epidemiological “hallmarks” for monitoring SPMMV. Evolutionary forces on SPMMV coupled with the virus’ broad host range imply a ‘silent build up’ of better fit variants in a changing climate, and this could explode into a worse disease conundrum. These information gaps need urgent filling to ease future management of virus disease emergences in sweetpotato.
Rice yellow mottle virus disease, caused by Rice yellow mottle virus (RYMV), is the most important disease of lowland rice in Uganda. However, little is known, about its genetic diversity in Uganda and relationships with other strains elsewhere across Africa. A new degenerate primer pair that targets amplification of the entire RYMV coat protein gene (ca. 738 bp) was designed to aid virus variability analysis using RT-PCR and Sanger sequencing. A total of 112 rice leaf samples from plants with RYMV mottling symptoms were collected during the year 2022 in 35 lowland rice fields within Uganda. The RYMV RT-PCR results were 100% positive, and all 112 PCR products were sequenced. BLASTN analysis revealed that all isolates were closely related (93-98%) to those previously studied originating from Kenya, Tanzania, and Madagascar. Despite high purifying selection pressure, diversity analysis on 81 out of 112 RYMV CP sequences revealed a very low diversity index of 3% and 1.0% at the nucleotide and amino acid levels, respectively. Except for glutamine, amino acid profile analysis revealed that all 81 Ugandan isolates shared the primary 19 amino acids based on RYMV coat protein region examined. Except for one isolate (UG68) from eastern Uganda that clustered alone, phylogeny analysis revealed two major clades. The Ugandan RYMV isolates were phylogenetically related to those from Democratic Republic of Congo, Madagascar, and Malawi, but not to RYMV isolates in West Africa. Thus, the RYMV isolates in this study are related to serotype 4, a strain common in eastern and southern Africa. RYMV serotype 4 originated in Tanzania, where evolutionary forces of mutation have resulted in the emergence and spread of new variants. Furthermore, mutations are evident within the coat protein gene of the Ugandan isolates, which may be attributed to changing RYMV pathosystems as a result of rice production intensification in Uganda. Overall, the diversity of RYMV was limited, most noticeably in eastern Uganda.
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