Endogenous florendoviruses are major components of plant genomes and hallmarks of virus evolution

Andrew D. W. Geering(The University of Queensland), Florian Maumus(Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique), Dario Copetti(University of Arizona), Nathalie Choisne(Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique), Derrick J. Zwickl(University of Arizona), Matthias Zytnicki(Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique), Alistair R. McTaggart(The University of Queensland), Simone Scalabrin(Istituto di Genomica Applicata), Silvia Vezzulli(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Rod A. Wing(University of Arizona), Hadi Quesneville(Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique), Pierre‐Yves Teycheney(Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement)
Nature Communications
November 10, 2014
Cited by 123Open Access
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Abstract

The extent and importance of endogenous viral elements have been extensively described in animals but are much less well understood in plants. Here we describe a new genus of Caulimoviridae called 'Florendovirus', members of which have colonized the genomes of a large diversity of flowering plants, sometimes at very high copy numbers (>0.5% total genome content). The genome invasion of Oryza is dated to over 1.8 million years ago (MYA) but phylogeographic evidence points to an even older age of 20-34 MYA for this virus group. Some appear to have had a bipartite genome organization, a unique characteristic among viral retroelements. In Vitis vinifera, 9% of the endogenous florendovirus loci are located within introns and therefore may influence host gene expression. The frequent colocation of endogenous florendovirus loci with TA simple sequence repeats, which are associated with chromosome fragility, suggests sequence capture during repair of double-stranded DNA breaks.


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