Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The ipomoviruses (family Potyviridae) that cause cassava brown streak disease (cassava brown streak virus [CBSV] and Uganda cassava brown streak virus [UCBSV]) are damaging plant pathogens that affect the sustainability of cassava production in East and Central Africa. However, little is known about the rate at which the viruses evolve and when they emerged in Africa - which inform how easily these viruses can host shift and resist RNAi approaches for control. We present here the rates of evolution determined from the coat protein gene (CP) of CBSV (Temporal signal in a UCBSV dataset was not sufficient for comparable analysis). Our BEAST analysis estimated the CBSV CP evolves at a mean rate of 1.43 × 10 nucleotide substitutions per site per year, with the most recent common ancestor of sampled CBSV isolates existing in 1944 (95% HPD, between years 1922 - 1963). We compared the published measured and estimated rates of evolution of CPs from ten families of plant viruses and showed that CBSV is an average-evolving potyvirid, but that members of Potyviridae evolve more quickly than members of Virgaviridae and the single representatives of Betaflexiviridae, Bunyaviridae, Caulimoviridae and Closteroviridae.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11145536PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.virusres.2024.199397DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cassava brown
16
brown streak
16
streak virus
12
family potyviridae
8
rates evolution
8
cassava
5
streak
4
virus evolves
4
evolves nucleotide-substitution
4
nucleotide-substitution rate
4

Similar Publications

Importance: Identifying new interventions to slow and prevent cognitive decline associated with dementia is critical. Nonpharmacological interventions targeting modifiable risk factors are promising, relatively low-cost, accessible, and safe approaches.

Objective: To compare the effects of two 2-year lifestyle interventions on cognitive trajectory in older adults at risk of cognitive decline and dementia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Limited ancestral diversity has impaired our ability to detect risk variants more prevalent in ancestry groups of predominantly non-European ancestral background in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). We construct and analyze a multi-ancestry GWAS dataset in the Alzheimer's Disease Genetics Consortium (ADGC) to test for novel shared and population-specific late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD) susceptibility loci and evaluate underlying genetic architecture in 37,382 non-Hispanic White (NHW), 6728 African American, 8899 Hispanic (HIS), and 3232 East Asian individuals, performing within ancestry fixed-effects meta-analysis followed by a cross-ancestry random-effects meta-analysis.

Results: We identify 13 loci with cross-population associations including known loci at/near CR1, BIN1, TREM2, CD2AP, PTK2B, CLU, SHARPIN, MS4A6A, PICALM, ABCA7, APOE, and two novel loci not previously reported at 11p12 (LRRC4C) and 12q24.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Monoclonal anti-amyloid therapies are now accessible, but how these treatments influence changes within the brain is still not clear. We investigated overall and regional change in amyloid removal, glucose metabolism, and atrophy in trial participants with dominantly inherited Alzheimer's disease (DIAD).

Methods: In the DIAN-TU-001 trial, 92 carriers received gantenerumab or placebo and underwent serial neuroimaging assessments including [C]-Pittsburgh compound-B (PiB) positron emission tomography (PET), [F]-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose (FDG) PET, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A novel cassava pulp-derived dietary fiber (CPDF) was developed by converting the residual starch in cassava pulp (CP) into resistant maltodextrin (RMD) through pyrodextrinization and enzymatic hydrolysis. This process produced a novel dietary fiber product with distinct properties, containing both insoluble fiber and high levels of soluble fiber. The effects of pyrodextrinization temperature were investigated at 140, 160, 180, and 200 °C.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Amyloid-β-directed monoclonal antibody therapies may lead to amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA). Clinical trials that formed the basis for the ARIA radiographic severity grading scale adopted by the approved drugs' labels utilized T2* gradient recalled echo (T2*-GRE) images for ARIA-hemorrhagic (ARIA-H) assessment. Little is known about the application of susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) to ARIA-H assessment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF