Multiple viral infections in Agaricus bisporus - Characterisation of 18 unique RNA viruses and 8 ORFans identified by deep sequencing

Abstract Thirty unique non-host RNAs were sequenced in the cultivated fungus, Agaricus bisporus, comprising 18 viruses each encoding an RdRp domain with an additional 8 ORFans (non-host RNAs with no similarity to known sequences). Two viruses were multipartite with component RNAs showing correlative...

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Main Authors: Gregory Deakin, Edward Dobbs, Julie M. Bennett, Ian M. Jones, Helen M. Grogan, Kerry S. Burton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-05-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-01592-9
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spelling doaj-79a5dd66e6a8493a8b3f7500e6f8dede2020-12-08T00:40:30ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222017-05-017111310.1038/s41598-017-01592-9Multiple viral infections in Agaricus bisporus - Characterisation of 18 unique RNA viruses and 8 ORFans identified by deep sequencingGregory Deakin0Edward Dobbs1Julie M. Bennett2Ian M. Jones3Helen M. Grogan4Kerry S. Burton5NIAB EMRNIAB EMRNIAB EMRUniversity of Reading, School of Biological SciencesTeagasc Food Research CentreNIAB EMRAbstract Thirty unique non-host RNAs were sequenced in the cultivated fungus, Agaricus bisporus, comprising 18 viruses each encoding an RdRp domain with an additional 8 ORFans (non-host RNAs with no similarity to known sequences). Two viruses were multipartite with component RNAs showing correlative abundances and common 3′ motifs. The viruses, all positive sense single-stranded, were classified into diverse orders/families. Multiple infections of Agaricus may represent a diverse, dynamic and interactive viral ecosystem with sequence variability ranging over 2 orders of magnitude and evidence of recombination, horizontal gene transfer and variable fragment numbers. Large numbers of viral RNAs were detected in multiple Agaricus samples; up to 24 in samples symptomatic for disease and 8–17 in asymptomatic samples, suggesting adaptive strategies for co-existence. The viral composition of growing cultures was dynamic, with evidence of gains and losses depending on the environment and included new hypothetical viruses when compared with the current transcriptome and EST databases. As the non-cellular transmission of mycoviruses is rare, the founding infections may be ancient, preserved in wild Agaricus populations, which act as reservoirs for subsequent cell-to-cell infection when host populations are expanded massively through fungiculture.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-01592-9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gregory Deakin
Edward Dobbs
Julie M. Bennett
Ian M. Jones
Helen M. Grogan
Kerry S. Burton
spellingShingle Gregory Deakin
Edward Dobbs
Julie M. Bennett
Ian M. Jones
Helen M. Grogan
Kerry S. Burton
Multiple viral infections in Agaricus bisporus - Characterisation of 18 unique RNA viruses and 8 ORFans identified by deep sequencing
Scientific Reports
author_facet Gregory Deakin
Edward Dobbs
Julie M. Bennett
Ian M. Jones
Helen M. Grogan
Kerry S. Burton
author_sort Gregory Deakin
title Multiple viral infections in Agaricus bisporus - Characterisation of 18 unique RNA viruses and 8 ORFans identified by deep sequencing
title_short Multiple viral infections in Agaricus bisporus - Characterisation of 18 unique RNA viruses and 8 ORFans identified by deep sequencing
title_full Multiple viral infections in Agaricus bisporus - Characterisation of 18 unique RNA viruses and 8 ORFans identified by deep sequencing
title_fullStr Multiple viral infections in Agaricus bisporus - Characterisation of 18 unique RNA viruses and 8 ORFans identified by deep sequencing
title_full_unstemmed Multiple viral infections in Agaricus bisporus - Characterisation of 18 unique RNA viruses and 8 ORFans identified by deep sequencing
title_sort multiple viral infections in agaricus bisporus - characterisation of 18 unique rna viruses and 8 orfans identified by deep sequencing
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Abstract Thirty unique non-host RNAs were sequenced in the cultivated fungus, Agaricus bisporus, comprising 18 viruses each encoding an RdRp domain with an additional 8 ORFans (non-host RNAs with no similarity to known sequences). Two viruses were multipartite with component RNAs showing correlative abundances and common 3′ motifs. The viruses, all positive sense single-stranded, were classified into diverse orders/families. Multiple infections of Agaricus may represent a diverse, dynamic and interactive viral ecosystem with sequence variability ranging over 2 orders of magnitude and evidence of recombination, horizontal gene transfer and variable fragment numbers. Large numbers of viral RNAs were detected in multiple Agaricus samples; up to 24 in samples symptomatic for disease and 8–17 in asymptomatic samples, suggesting adaptive strategies for co-existence. The viral composition of growing cultures was dynamic, with evidence of gains and losses depending on the environment and included new hypothetical viruses when compared with the current transcriptome and EST databases. As the non-cellular transmission of mycoviruses is rare, the founding infections may be ancient, preserved in wild Agaricus populations, which act as reservoirs for subsequent cell-to-cell infection when host populations are expanded massively through fungiculture.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-01592-9
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