Abstract:
Begomoviruses belongs to group of plant viruses that possesses circular single stranded (ss)
DNA genome(s) transmitted by Bemisia tabaci G. and only infects dicotyledonous plants.
Begomoviruses affects a significant number of economically valuable number of plants
including vegetables, weeds, and ornamental plants. Weeds and ornamental plants act as
alternate reservoirs for economically important Begomoviruses, as source of inoculum and
recombination sites. In addition, Begomovirus sequences submitted before updated
classification in databases creates gray areas. The goal of this study was to examine the
demarcation of species, geographic spread over the years and to disclose the alternate hosts of
Begomoviruses in South African countries. FASTA and GenBank sequences of the full-length
genome of Begomovirus are accessible in the database, were extracted and the parameters -
host range, year of collection and geographic distribution of Begomoviruses were tabulated.
The sequences were aligned by muscle alignments and species were identified through species
demarcation tool (SDT) and confirmed by sequence distance. Graphs were generated using MS
Excel, while Phylogenetic tree was constructed using MEGA X’s maximum likelihood. Till
date 520 species of Begomoviruses are reported across the globe, among which 33 species and
~1096 isolates are present in South African countries. African cassava mosaic virus has the
highest number of isolates (301) followed by East Africa cassava mosaic virus (230), South
Africa cassava mosaic virus (137), East Africa cassava mosaic Kenya virus (104) and Cotton
leaf curl Gezira has (79). Highest number of isolates are found in Madagascar (288), followed
by Kenya (127), Burkina Faso (103), Ghana (84), Comoros (77), Central African Republic (67),
Mayotte (38), Uganda (36) and Cameroon (34). Majority of begomoviruses isolates are found
to infect Manihot esculenta (720), Solabun lycopersicum (104), Abelmoshus esculentus (46),
and Jatropha curas (38) in South African countries. Begomoviruses have widened their choice
of host, and they do have multiple alternative hosts. A single specie has potential to affect
members of several groups of plants. Moreover, single plant is also the host to many types of
Begomoviruses. The number of isolates that demands renaming is increased, and they move
from one country to another.
Chapter 1 Introductio