Diversity and impact of single-stranded RNA viruses in Czech Heterobasidion populations

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Abstract

Heterobasidion annosum sensu lato comprises some of the most devastating conifer pathogens conifers. Exploring virocontrol as a potential strategy to mitigate economic losses caused by these fungi holds promise for the future. In this study, we conducted a comprehensive screening for viruses in a 98 H. annosum s.l. specimens from different regions of Czechia aiming to identify viruses inducing hypovirulence. Initial examination for dsRNA presence was followed by RNA-Seq analyses using pooled RNA libraries constructed from H. annosum and Heterobasidion parviporum , with diverse bioinformatic pipelines employed for virus discovery. Our study uncovered 25 distinct ssRNA viruses, including two ourmia-like viruses, one mitovirus, one fusarivirus, one tobamo-like virus, one cogu-like virus, one bisegmented narna-like virus and one segment of another narna-like virus, and 17 ambi-like viruses, for which hairpin and hammerhead ribozymes were detected. Coinfections of up to 10 viruses were observed in six Heterobasidion isolates, while another six harbored a single virus. 73% of the isolates analyzed by RNA-Seq were virus-free. These findings show that the virome of Heterobasidion populations in Czechia is highly diverse and differs from that in the boreal region. We further investigated the host effects of certain identified viruses through comparisons of the mycelial growth rate and proteomic analyses and found that certain tested viruses caused growth reductions of up to 22% and significant alterations in the host proteome profile. Their intraspecific transmission rates ranged from 0% to 33%. Further studies are needed to fully understand the biocontrol potential of these viruses in planta .

Importance

  • First report of a fusarivirus, a tobamo- and a cogu-like virus in Heterobasidion

  • Certain viruses caused mycelial growth reduction in H. annosum host strains

  • Viral infections lead to proteome changes in Heterobasidion

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