Over the past years deep sequencing experiments have opened novel doors to ?reconstruct viral populations in a high-throughput and cost-effective manner. Currently a ?substantial number of studies have been performed which employ Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) techniques to either analyse known viruses by means of a reference-guided approach or to discover novel viruses using a de novo-based strategy. Taking ?advantage of the well-known Cymbidium ringspot virus we have carried out a comparison of ?different bioinformatics tools to reconstruct the viral genome based on 21-27 nt short (s)RNA sequencing with the aim to identify the most efficient pipeline. The same approach was ?applied to a population of plants constituting an ancient variety of Cicer arietinum with red ?seeds. Among the discovered viruses, we describe the presence of a Tobamovirus referring to the Tomato mottle mosaic virus (NC_022230), which was not yet observed on C. arietinum nor revealed in Europe and a viroid referring to Hop stunt viroid (NC_001351.1) never reported in chickpea. Notably, a reference sequence guided approach appeared the most efficient in such kind of investigation. Instead, the de novo assembly reached a non-appreciable coverage although the most prominent viral species could still be identified. ?Advantages and limitations of viral metagenomics analysis using sRNAs are discussed.

Bioinformatics approaches for viral metagenomics in plants using short RNAs: model case of study and application to a Cicer arietinum population.

Miozzi L;Pantaleo V
2015

Abstract

Over the past years deep sequencing experiments have opened novel doors to ?reconstruct viral populations in a high-throughput and cost-effective manner. Currently a ?substantial number of studies have been performed which employ Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) techniques to either analyse known viruses by means of a reference-guided approach or to discover novel viruses using a de novo-based strategy. Taking ?advantage of the well-known Cymbidium ringspot virus we have carried out a comparison of ?different bioinformatics tools to reconstruct the viral genome based on 21-27 nt short (s)RNA sequencing with the aim to identify the most efficient pipeline. The same approach was ?applied to a population of plants constituting an ancient variety of Cicer arietinum with red ?seeds. Among the discovered viruses, we describe the presence of a Tobamovirus referring to the Tomato mottle mosaic virus (NC_022230), which was not yet observed on C. arietinum nor revealed in Europe and a viroid referring to Hop stunt viroid (NC_001351.1) never reported in chickpea. Notably, a reference sequence guided approach appeared the most efficient in such kind of investigation. Instead, the de novo assembly reached a non-appreciable coverage although the most prominent viral species could still be identified. ?Advantages and limitations of viral metagenomics analysis using sRNAs are discussed.
2015
VIROLOGIA VEGETALE
Istituto per la Protezione Sostenibile delle Piante - IPSP
Istituto per la Protezione Sostenibile delle Piante - IPSP
bioinformatics
chickpea
ancient varieties
plant viruses
reference sequences
de novo assembly
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/225885
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