Viral diseases occur wherever sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) is cultivated and because this crop is vegetatively propagated, accumulation and perpetuation of viruses can become a major constraint for production. Up to 90 % reductions in yield have been reported in association with viral infections. About 20 officially accepted or tentative virus species have been found in sweet potato and other Ipomoea species. They include three species of begomoviruses (genus Begomovirus, family Geminiviridae) whose genomes have been fully sequenced. In this investigation, we conducted a search for begomoviruses infecting sweet potato and Ipomoea indica in Spain and characterized the complete genome of 15 isolates. In addition to sweet potato leaf curl virus (SPLCV) and Ipomoea yellowing vein virus, we identified three new begomovirus species and a novel strain of SPLCV. Our analysis also demonstrated that extensive recombination events have shaped the populations of Ipomoea-infecting begomoviruses in Spain. The increased complexity of the unique Ipomoea-infecting begomovirus group, highlighted by our results, open new horizons to understand the phylogeny and evolution of the family Geminiviridae.
INTRODUCTIONSweet potato (Ipomoea batatas, family Convolvulaceae) is ranked as the seventh most important food crop in global production. This crop originated in South America (O'Brien, 1972) but today it is grown in most tropical, subtropical and temperate regions of the world. Numerous ornamental Ipomoea species are grown worldwide. Ipomoea indica is widely grown ornamentally in the Mediterranean basin, where it is frequently naturalized. The putative role of I. indica and other species in the genus as a reservoir for sweet potato pathogens has not been explored.Because sweet potato is vegetatively propagated, accumulation of viruses can become a major constraint for production. About 20 accepted or tentative virus species have been described in sweet potato . Three begomovirus species have been described as infecting Ipomoea species and their genomes have been fully sequenced. These are: sweet potato leaf curl virus (SPLCV) (Lotrakul et al., 1998;Lotrakul & Valverde., 1999), Ipomoea yellow vein virus (IYVV) (Banks et al., 1999) and sweet potato leaf curl Georgia virus (SPLCGV) (Lotrakul et al., 2003). SPLCV or related begomoviruses have been isolated from sweet potato in the Americas (Lotrakul et al., 2003;Fuentes & Salazar, 2003), Asia (Onuki & Hanada, 1998;Luan et al., 2006) and Africa (Miano et al., 2006) and from I. indica in Europe . Begomoviruses are likely to be present in many regions where sweet potato is grown but their prevalence and distribution is still unknown. Difficulties in detecting and isolating begomoviruses directly from sweet potato plants could have impeded additional reports (Kokkinos & Clark., 2006b).Information about the variability among isolates of the described sweet potato begomoviruses is limited. Comparisons and phylogenetic analyses of partial sequences of the AC1 gene of several isolates collect...