key: cord-0053102-ng3688gf authors: Heo, Kyeong-Jae; Kwon, Sun-Jung; Kim, Mi-Kyeong; Kwak, Hae-Ryun; Han, Soo-Jung; Kwon, Min-Jun; Rao, A L N; Seo, Jang-Kyun title: Newly emerged resistance-breaking variants of cucumber mosaic virus represent ongoing host-interactive evolution of an RNA virus date: 2020-11-07 journal: Virus Evol DOI: 10.1093/ve/veaa070 sha: 133b8a3bf1dfa1dfdce05e65a4610eaddf12f26e doc_id: 53102 cord_uid: ng3688gf Understanding the evolutionary history of a virus and the mechanisms influencing the direction of its evolution is essential for the development of more durable strategies to control the virus in crop fields. While the deployment of host resistance in crops is the most efficient means to control various viruses, host resistance itself can act as strong selective pressure and thus play a critical role in the evolution of virus virulence. Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV), a plant RNA virus with high evolutionary capacity, has caused endemic disease in various crops worldwide, including pepper (Capsicum annuum L.), because of frequent emergence of resistance-breaking variants. In this study, we examined the molecular and evolutionary characteristics of recently emerged, resistance-breaking CMV variants infecting pepper. Our population genetics analysis revealed that the high divergence capacity of CMV RNA1 might have played an essential role in the host-interactive evolution of CMV and in shaping the CMV population structure in pepper. We also demonstrated that nonsynonymous mutations in RNA1 encoding the 1a protein enabled CMV to overcome the deployed resistance in pepper. Our findings suggest that resistance-driven selective pressures on RNA1 might have contributed in shaping the unique evolutionary pattern of CMV in pepper. Therefore, deployment of a single resistance gene may reduce resistance durability against CMV and more integrated approaches are warranted for successful control of CMV in pepper. Analyzing the genetic diversity and population structure of a virus is an essential approach for understanding its evolutionary history and related mechanisms that drive its evolution and dispersion. Since viruses are obligate intracellular parasites and depend on their hosts for most aspects of the life cycle, they have thus evolved under host-interactive constraints (Roossinck 2003; Lauring et al. 2013) . RNA viruses, the largest group of plant viruses, are known to have a rapid evolutionary rate due to error-prone replication and short generation times, allowing for fast virulence changes to sustain infection (Cabanillas et al. 2013; Lauring et al. 2013) . In this sense, the widespread use of resistant cultivars may apply significant selective pressures to direct the adaptive virulence evolution of viruses in crop fields (Garcia-Andres et al. 2009 ). However, mechanistic links between diversity, virulence, and in vivo selective pressures are little understood in the crop fields. Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV; genus Cucumovirus, family Bromoviridae) is one of the most successful RNA viruses for host adaptation and dispersion. CMV has evolved to infect more than 1,200 species, comprising more than eighty plant families and has been dispersed worldwide (Palukaitis and Garcia-Arenal 2003) . In over 100 years since its discovery (Doolittle 1916; Jagger 1916) , numerous CMV strains and isolates have been identified from various plant species, including dicots and monocots (Jacquemond 2012) . Thus far, complete genome sequences of more than 110 CMV isolates have been reported, and extensive analyses of CMV population genetics have been performed to examine the evolutionary history of the virus (Roossinck 2002; Kim et al. 2014; Ohshima et al. 2016) . In particular, a previous study showed that CMV populations infecting pepper display unique patterns of evolution in Korea (Kim et al. 2014) , suggesting the possibility of the host-adaptive evolution of CMV in pepper. CMV isolates can be divided into three major subgroups (IA, IB, and II), based on their serological and molecular characteristics (Roossinck 2002; Jacquemond 2012) . CMV isolates can also be classified into different pathotypes based on their virulence in specific plant species and varieties (Lin et al. 2003; Diveki et al. 2004; Lee et al. 2009 ). The CMV genome is divided into three single-stranded RNAs, designated RNA1, RNA2, and RNA3 (Palukaitis and Garcia-Arenal 2003; Jacquemond 2012) . RNA1 encodes the 1a protein, which contains two functional domains: an N-terminal methyltransferase domain and a C-terminal helicase domain. RNA2 encodes the 2a protein, which contains a viral RNAdependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) domain. The 1a and 2a proteins, along with some host factors, comprise the replicase complex. RNA2 also encodes the 2b protein, which has RNA silencing suppressor activity. RNA3 also encodes two proteins, the 3a protein (movement protein; MP) and the coat protein (CP), which are essential for virus movement and transmission. In resistance responses, CMV 2a elicits the hypersensitive response by interacting with the RT4-4 gene in common bean and with the Cry gene in cowpea, while the CMV CP confers the extreme resistance by interacting with the RCY1 gene in Arabidopsis thaliana (Kim and Palukaitis 1997; Takahashi et al. 2002; Seo et al. 2006; Sekine et al. 2008) . In pepper, CMV 1a was identified as an avirulence factor that triggers the extreme resistance by interacting with the Cmr1 gene (Kang et al. 2010 (Kang et al. , 2012 . CMV is an agriculturally important virus, in addition to being useful to the molecular understanding of RNA viruses. In particular, CMV causes endemic disease in various crops, including pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) (Jacquemond 2012; Kim et al. 2014) . Although various resistant pepper cultivars have been developed, resistance-breaking variants have continuously emerged, and CMV remains the prevalent virus in pepper crops in Korea and other parts of the world (Ben Tamarzizt et al. 2013; Kim et al. 2014; Choi et al. 2015; Kwon et al. 2018) . In this study, we isolated several CMV variants from pepper cultivars resistant to the previous epidemic CMV pathotypes, P0 and P1, classified according to their virulence in indicator pepper cultivars (Lee et al. 2009 ). Since virulence analysis showed that these collected isolates are highly virulent resistance-breaking variants, we here aimed to investigate the molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the emerged CMV resistance-breaking variants in the CMV population in order to understand the resistancebreaking mechanism. We also performed molecular analyses to examine mechanistic links between CMV evolution and hostassociated constraints. Further, we utilized infectious cDNA clones of two CMV strains, CMV-GTN (a resistance-breaking strain isolated from pepper in 2013) and CMV-P1 (a strain isolated from pepper in 2004 belonging to the P1 pathotype), to identify mutations responsible for resistance breaking in pepper (Kang et al. 2012; Choi et al. 2015) . CMV-GTN was isolated from pepper in our previous study (Choi et al. 2015) and maintained in the pepper cultivar Chungyang. Six additional CMV isolates were collected in this study from pepper cultivars resistant to the CMV P1 pathotype in Korean commercial pepper fields in 2016. The CMV isolates were biologically isolated by mechanical inoculation on the leaves of a local lesion host, Chenopodium quinoa. Full-genome sequencing of the CMV isolates was performed as described in our previous study (Kim et al. 2014) . Sequences were deposited in the GenBank database (accession numbers are listed in Table 1 ). Full-length infectious cDNA clones of CMV-Fny and CMV-P1 (pCMV-Fny and pCMV-P1, respectively), generated in our previous studies (Seo et al. 2009a; Kang et al. 2012) , were used as viral sources for each strain. CMV-Fny and -P1 were maintained in Nicotiana benthamiana plants. Virulence of the CMV strains and isolates was examined in various pepper cultivars, including Baerota, Manita, PR-Sagslee, Quarri, Sinhong, and Superior. All plants inoculated with CMV were grown in an insect-free growth chamber at 25 C under a 16/8-h photoperiod. Total RNA was isolated from pepper leaves infected with CMV-GTN using TRIzol (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions, and employed for cDNA synthesis of CMV-GTN viral RNA. Specific primers containing the appropriate restriction sites for cloning were designed for amplification of full-length sequences of CMV-GTN RNA1 (GTN-R1-5E-KpnI-Fw: 5 0 -GGGGTACCGTTTATTTACAAGAGCGTACGG-3 0 and GTN-R1R3-3E-BamHI-Rv: 5 0 -CGGGATCCTGGTCTCCTTTG AGAGACCCC-3 0 , restriction enzyme sites are underlined), RNA2 (GTN-R2-5E-XbaI-Fw: GCTCTAGAGTTTATTTACAAGAGCGTAC GG-3 0 and GTN-R2-3E-BamHI-Rv: CGGGATCCTGGTCTCCTT CAGGAAGCCC-3 0 , restriction enzyme sites are underlined), and RNA3 (GTN-R3-5E-XbaI-Fw: 5 0 -GCTCTAGAGTAATCTTACCACTG TGTGTGT-3 0 and GTN-R1R3-3E-BamHI-Rv: 5 0 -CGGGATCCTGG TCTCCTTTGAGAGACCCC-3 0 , restriction enzyme sites are underlined). cDNAs of RNA1, RNA2, and RNA3 of CMV-GTN were synthesized using SuperScript III reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). The resulting cDNAs were used to amplify full-length RNA1, RNA2, and RNA3 using Q5 DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA, USA) and the primer pairs. Amplified fulllength RNA1 was digested with KpnI and BamHI and cloned into the T-DNA region of a modified binary vector, pCassRz (Kwak et al. 2016) , opened with KpnI and BamHI. Amplified full-length RNA2 and RNA3 were digested with XbaI and BamHI and cloned into the pCassRz vector opened with XabI and BamHI. The resulting constructs were designated pCMV-GTN-R1, -R2, and -R3. The full sequences of the cloned CMV-GTN RNAs were determined by Sanger DNA sequencing and deposited in the GenBank database under accession numbers MN422336 (RNA1), MN422337 (RNA2), and MN422338 (RNA3). The constructs pCMV-GTN-R1, -R2, and -R3 were transformed into Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain GV3101. The 1a proteins of pCMV-GTN and -P1 differs only in their amino acids at positions 253 and 553 (nucleotide positions 852 and 1752 in RNA1, respectively), therefore two chimeric RNA1 constructs were generated by exchanging corresponding fragments utilizing three available restriction enzyme sites (SalI site at nucleotide position 577 in RNA1, FspAI site at position 1173, and BglII site at position 2730) in pCMV-P1 and -GTN. To generate the chimeric RNA1 construct containing Asn at position 253 and Ser at position 553 in the 1a protein, the region from SalI to FspA1, was removed from pCMV-GTN-RNA1 by digesting with SalI and FspAI and replaced with the corresponding fragment obtained from pCMV-P1-RNA1 by digesting with the same restriction enzymes. The resulting construct was named pCMV-RNA1-253N: 553S. To generate the chimeric RNA1 construct containing Asp at position 253 and Pro at position 553 in the 1a protein, the region from FspAI to BglII was removed from pCMV-GTN-RNA1 by digesting with FspAI and BglII and replaced with the corresponding fragment obtained from pCMV-P1-RNA1 by digesting with the same restriction enzymes. The resulting construct was named pCMV-RNA1-253D: 553P. Sequences of the chimeric constructs were validated by DNA sequencing. Infectious cDNA clones of CMV were inoculated by Agrobacterium-mediated infiltration (agroinfiltration). Briefrly, Agrobacterium transformants were grown at 28 C in LB medium containing 100 lg/ml kanamycin and 50 lg/ml rifampicin. A. tumefaciens cultures harboring either CMV RNA1, RNA2, or RNA3 were mixed in equal proportions for agroinfiltration as described previously (Seo et al. 2009a ). The mixture was infiltrated into the abaxial surface of leaves using a 1-ml syringe. The inoculated plants were grown in an insect-free growth chamber. For mechanical inoculation of pepper, crude sap was prepared from systemic leaves of N.benthamiana infected with each CMV strain or isolate and rubbed on leaves dusted with carborundum (400 mesh). After inoculation, the leaves were washed with sterile water. To verify systemic infection of CMV in the inoculated plants, total RNA was extracted from upper non-inoculated leaves and subjected to reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis using specific primers for CMV (5 0 -AAG AARCTTGTTTCGCGCATT-3 0 and 5 0 -TGGTCTCCTTTTRAGGCCC CCA-3 0 ) as described previously (Kim et al. 2014 ). Multiple sequence alignment was performed using ClustalW implemented in MEGA X software (Kumar et al., 2018) . Determination of the best nucleotide substitution model was performed using the model selection program implemented in MEGA X. Pairwise genetic distance and diversity were analyzed using Tamura-Nei model in MEGA X. Phylogenetic analysis of CMV populations was performed using the maximumlikelihood method (Tamura-Nei model) in MEGA X with bootstrap values calculated using 1,000 random replications. Calculated trees were displayed using MEGA X. Median-joining haplotype networks were generated using NETWORK version 10 (https://www.fluxus-engineering.com/). Recombination events were analyzed using the RDP, GENECONV, Chimaera, MaxChi, BOOTSCAN, and SISCAN methods implemented in the RDP4 program with default settings and a Bonferroni corrected Pvalue cut-off of 0.01 as described previously (Seo et al. 2009c ). To reduce the possibility of obtaining false recombination signals, only recombination events supported by at least three different methods with an associated P-value of <1.0 Â 10 À6 were considered. Total protein was extracted from N.benthamiana leaves using TRIzol (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Proteins were separated by 12 per cent SDS-PAGE and transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membrane. The blot was probed with an antibody against CMV CP (Plant Virus Gene Bank, Korea). A secondary antibody, conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA), was used with the Amhersham ECL Western Blotting Detection aS, susceptible (systemic mosaic and stunting); R, resistant; CMV infection was verified by RT-PCR analysis using total RNA isolated from upper non-inoculated leaves. Results were obtained from three independent experiments using at least three plants per experiment. System (GE Healthcare Life Sciences, Marlborough, MA, USA) to visualize the antigens. CMV pathotypes P0 and P1 were prevalent in the 1980s-1990s and early 2000s, respectively, in Korean pepper fields and caused severe damage to the pepper industry (Choi et al. 2005; Lee et al. 2006 ). Since then, various pepper cultivars resistant to these pathotypes have been developed and cultivated in Korean fields, which has successfully and gradually decreased the incidence of CMV (Lee et al. 2009; Kang et al. 2012) . However, since the early 2010s, CMV variants have emerged that can infect pepper cultivars resistant to CMV pathotype P1 (Kim et al. 2014; Choi et al. 2015) . In our previous study in 2013, we isolated and characterized the resistance-breaking CMV strain GTN from a pepper field in Goesan (Choi et al. 2015) . Virulence analysis demonstrated that CMV-GTN could infect most commercial pepper cultivars (Choi et al. 2015) . In 2016, we performed additional surveys in the same area to collect more resistance-breaking isolates. Six additional isolates were collected from pepper cultivars resistant to CMV pathotype P1 and their virulence was accessed on several pepper cultivars. CMV-Fny, -P1, and -GTN were included in the experiment as reference strains. All tested pepper cultivars, including Baerota and PR-Sagslee which are resistant to CMV pathotype P1, were susceptible to the six newly collected isolates (Table 1) , indicating the new CMV variants were capable of overcoming resistance in pepper. Among them, three isolates (CMV-RB1, -RB2, and -RB3) were further analyzed to determine their complete genomic sequences. Genomic segment lengths were identical for all three isolates (3,358 nt for RNA1, 3,045 nt for RNA2, and 2,213 nt for RNA3). Their sequences were deposited in the GenBank database (accession numbers are listed in Table 2 ). To examine the evolutionary positions of emerging resistancebreaking CMV variants in the Korean CMV population, we performed phylogenetic analyses, including forty-five CMV strains and isolates collected from various host species in Korea. Regional-scale analysis of viral populations can provide more detailed aspects of evolution than those from a global-scale analysis. We also included six CMV strains (CTL, Fny, Ix, Ls, Q, and Y) as reference strains, and peanut stunt virus (PSV) strain ER as an outgroup taxon [GenBank accession numbers for PSV-ER: U15728 (RNA1), U15729 (RNA2), and U15730 (RNA3)]. Phylogenetic trees were reconstructed by the maximumlikelihood method based on alignments of the complete RNA1, RNA2, and RNA3 nucleotide sequences. All Korean CMV isolates except Ack2 and YY-Cnidium were found to belong to subgroup I ( Fig. 1) . When phylogenetic analyses were performed using RNA2 and RNA3 sequences, the Korean CMV isolates in subgroup I were largely subdivided into two clusters ( Fig. 1B and C) . In particular, most CMV isolates from pepper were grouped together in cluster A, while isolates from different hosts were grouped closely in cluster B ( Fig. 1B and C) . Divergence in the phylogenetic tree reconstructed with RNA1 sequences differed considerably from those reconstructed with RNA2 and RNA3 sequences (Fig. 1A) . CMV isolates from pepper were further split into two clusters. CMV-GTN and all three resistance-breaking isolates, which were collected from pepper cultivars resistant to CMV pathotype P1, were closely grouped together in cluster A in the phylogeny of RNA1 (Fig. 1A) . In contrast, CMV-RB3 was largely included in the cluster formed by pepper isolates in the phylogenies of RNA2 and RNA3, but not closely grouped with other resistance-breaking isolates and CMV-GTN ( Fig. 1B and C) . The degree of divergence (i.e. branching and branch lengths) among isolates from different hosts was significantly higher in the RNA1 phylogenetic tree than those found in the RNA2 and RNA3 trees. Differences in divergence patterns were further supported by genetic diversity analysis (Table 3 and Supplementary Table S1 ), in which the Korean CMV isolates belonging to subgroup I were divided into two subpopulations based on their isolation hosts: pepper vs. other host plants. The results revealed higher genetic diversities between subpopulations (i.e. pepper vs. other) than within subpopulations (i.e. pepper vs. pepper) in all RNA segments (Table 3 ). In particular, the genetic diversity among CMV isolates from different hosts (i.e. other vs. other) and the mean diversity in entire population were significantly higher in RNA1 than in the other RNAs (Table 3 and Supplementary Table S1 ). This result suggests that different evolutionary constraints were applied on each CMV RNA, and RNA1 may have evolved under higher host-specific constraints than RNA2 and RNA3. Some patterns of hostassociated phylogenetic relationships in CMV RNA1 were further evident when the CMV population, comprising 115 strains and isolates, was analyzed on a global scale ( Fig. 2 and Supplementary Fig. S1 ). Most pepper isolates, including R1 (Rwanda), KO (India), and Vir (Italy), clustered together (Fig. 2) . Another example can be found in the clustering of the CMV tomato isolates. Many tomato isolates clustered very closely together, even though their countries of origin varied (Fig. 2) . Of note, CMV isolates 209 (from Glycine soja), BX (from Pinellia ternate), and PHz (from P. ternate) occupied intermediate positions between subgroups I and II ( Fig. 2 and Supplementary Fig. S1 ), suggesting the existence of evolutionary intermediates between CMV subgroups I and II. Phylogenetic analyses using the maximum-likelihood method roughly showed that CMV resistance-breaking variants, including CMV-GTN, might be recently evolved from the existing CMV pepper population. Because no significant recombination events were detected in the resistance-breaking variants (data not shown), they might have emerged due to the marginal accumulation of mutations during replication. To obtain more insight into the ancestral relationships of resistance-breaking isolates in the Korean CMV population, median-joining haplotype network analyses were performed based on alignments of complete RNA1, RNA2, and RNA3 nucleotide sequences using the NETWORK software (Forster et al. 2020 ). The haplotype networks clearly showed that resistance-breaking isolates have originated from the pepper population very recently, as they clustered at or near the tips of the network (Fig. 3) . CMV-GTN was likely the parental strain of CMV-RB1 and -RB2 in all RNA segments. For CMV-RB3, only RNA1 appeared to be derived from CMV-GTN, while RNA2 and RNA3 might have originated from different isolates by reassortment. More importantly, the resistance-breaking variants, including CMV-GTN, were of the same lineage and formed a clearly separated cluster in the RNA1 haplotype network (Fig. 3) . This suggested that evolutionary selection in RNA1 might be in progress in the CMV pepper population and responsible for the emergence of resistancebreaking variants in Korea. In this regard, the recent increase in the cultivation of pepper cultivars resistant to CMV pathotypes P0 and P1 in Korea seems to be closely associated with evolutionary selection in the CMV pepper population. Infectious cDNA clones of two CMV strains F006Ey (pathotype P0) and P1 (pathotype P1), namely, pCMV-Fny and pCMV-P1, were obtained from our previous studies (Seo et al., 2009a; Kang et al. 2012) . In this study, we additionally generated an infectious cDNA clone of CMV-GTN (pCMV-GTN), a parental resistance-breaking variant, to identify mutations responsible for resistance-breaking in pepper (Fig. 4A) . We first sought to verify whether pCMV-GTN effectively infect susceptible hosts and has the same virulence as the original virus. N.benthamiana plants were agro-infiltrated with pCMV-Fny, -P1, or -GTN and observed over a period of 4 weeks following the inoculation. At 7 days post-infiltration (dpi), N.benthamiana inoculated with pCMV-Fny exhibited mild mosaic symptoms in the upper systemic leaves, more severe symptoms of mosaic and leaf malformation were observed in the upper systemic leaves of N.benthamiana inoculated with pCMV-P1 and -GTN (Fig. 4B ). Systemic infection with CMV-GTN was also confirmed by RT-PCR analysis using total RNA isolated from upper noninoculated leaves (data not shown). These results demonstrated that pCMV-GTN was fully infectious upon agroinfiltration. Symptoms became more pronounced at 15 dpi, and symptomatic differences between the plants inoculated with pCMV-P1 and -GTN began to emerge (Fig. 4B ). pCMV-GTN induced severe size reduction of the systemic leaves and necrosis on the inoculated leaves, while pCMV-P1 caused severe mosaic symptoms and malformation on the systemic leaves. At 20 dpi, the plants inoculated with pCMV-GTN exhibited necrosis on the leaves and petioles and growth was inhibited, whereas the plants inoculated with pCMV-P1 developed severely distorted systemic leaves but continued to grow (Fig. 4B ). This result demonstrated the distinct pathogenicity of CMV-GTN compared to CMV-P1 and -Fny in N.benthamiana. We next sought to examine whether the different pathogenicites among CMV strains were due to differences in their replication levels. To this end, western blot analysis was performed to compare CP accumulation levels using total proteins extracted from the symptomatic leaves of N.benthamiana plants infected with either pCMV-Fny, -P1, or -GTN at 7 dpi. CP accumulation levels of CMV-P1 and -GTN were much higher than that of CMV-Fny, but did not differ significantly between CMV-P1 and -GTN (Fig. 4C) . This result suggests that differences in viral accumulation may be responsible for differences in pathogenicity between CMV-Fny and either CMV-P1 or -GTN. However, it is unlikely that pathogenicity differences between CMV-P1 and -GTN in N.benthamiana were due to viral accumulation. We next examined the virulence of pCMV-GTN in various pepper cultivars. Crude sap from N.benthamiana infected with pCMV-Fny, -P1, or GTN was used as a viral source. Eleven The virulence of pCMV-GTN differs from that of pCMV-P1 in some pepper cultivars. Therefore, we examined which of the three genomic RNAs was the genetic determinant causing resistance breaking. To this end, the virulence of pseudorecombinants between pCMV-GTN and -P1 was examined in pepper plants by mixing Agrobacterium cultures harboring plasmids expressing each RNA segment of CMV-GTN and CMV-P1: G1, G2, and G3 represent pCMV-GTN RNA1, RNA2, and RNA3, while P1, P2, and P3 represent pCMV-P1 RNA1, RNA2, and RNA3, respectively. Virulence of six pseudo-recombinants (G1G2P3, G1P2G3, G1P2P3, P1G2G3, P1G2P3, and P1P2G3) was evaluated in four pepper cultivars, including Quarri, Sinhong, Manita, and Baerota. Symptom development was monitored over 4 weeks post-inoculation and CMV infection was confirmed by RT-PCR using total RNA extracted from upper non-inoculated leaves. All pseudo-recombinants caused systemic infection in pepper cultivars Quarri, Sinhong, and Manita, which are susceptible to both pCMV-GTN and -P1 (Table 5) . On the other hand, three pseudo-recombinants (G1P2P3, G1G2P3, and G1P2G3) containing pCMV-GTN RNA1 caused systemic infections in the pepper cultivar Baerota, which is resistant to CMV-P1 but susceptible to CMV-GTN (Table 5 and Fig. 5 ). In comparison, three other pseudo-recombinants (P1G2G3, P1P2G3, and P1G2P3) were avirulent in this pepper cultivar (Table 5 and Fig. 5) . Briefly, the results indicate that RNA1 of CMV-GTN contained the mutations responsible for breaking resistance in pepper. Since CMV RNA1 encodes only the 1a protein, we hypothesized that amino acid residue differences between the 1a proteins of CMV-GTN and -P1 might be responsible for the represents a haplotype, its size is proportional to haplotype frequency. Small red circles on nodes indicate median vectors that represent hypothetical missing or unsampled ancestral haplotypes. observed virulence differences. Thus, the amino acid sequences of the 1a proteins of the two strains were compared. Sequence analysis revealed only two amino acids differed between the 1a proteins for CMV-GTN and -P1 (at amino acid positions 253 and 553) (Fig. 6A and Supplementary Fig. S2 ). Interestingly, these amino acid substitutions were caused by nonsynonymous mutations at nucleotide positions 852 and 1752 in RNA1, respectively, and the same mutations were also found in other resistance-breaking isolates examined in this study ( Supplementary Fig. S3 ). To identify which amino acid difference in the 1a protein affected virulence, single amino acid substitution mutants were generated by exchanging corresponding RNA1 genomic regions between pCMV-GTN and -P1, utilizing commonly available restriction enzyme sites (Fig. 6A) . Virulence of these mutants was evaluated in two pepper cultivars, Quarri and Baerota. Symptom development was monitored for 4 weeks post-inoculation. As with their parental viruses, pCMV-RNA1-253N: 553S and -253 D: 553P were virulent in N.benthamiana when inoculated in combination with either P2 þ P3 or G2 þ G3 (Fig. 6A ). In addition, both mutants infected Baerota systemically, demonstrating single amino acid substitutions at amino acid positions 253 and 553 independently affected CMV pathogenicity in pepper ( Fig. 6A and B) . Interestingly, regardless of the combination with RNA2 and RNA3, pCMV-RNA1-253N: 553S induced symptoms similar to those induced by pCMV-GTN in Baerota, whereas pCMV-RNA1-253D: 553P caused distinct symptoms of embossed mosaic on young leaves (Fig. 6B) . Thus, it appears that the amino acid residue at position 553 of the 1a protein was associated with symptomatic variation of CMV in pepper. Maintenance of the amino acid substitutions of the 1a protein in the progeny viruses was confirmed by RT-PCR amplification of the corresponding genomic regions, followed by direct sequencing. Mutation pressure, natural selection, and genetic drift are the main evolutionary forces responsible for adaptive population diversity (Gao et al. 2017 ). The population of RNA viruses is diverse due to their error-prone replication and short generation times (Roossinck 2003) . Thus, selective pressures exerted by various ecological and genetic factors on virus-host interactions play a critical role in shaping the virus population structure and may lead to virulence evolution. These evolutionary consequences strongly influence viral fitness and virulence in a particular host genotype and can result in host adaptation (Rico et al. 2006; Safari and Roossinck 2018) . CMV is distributed worldwide and has the most extensive host range of any plant virus, infecting more than 1,200 plant species, including over 200 types of mono-and dicotyledonous crop plants (Palukaitis and Garcia-Arenal 2003) . This suggests that CMV may have the great evolutionary capacity, allowing it to adapt to new hosts and environments rapidly. Our phylogenetic analyses of the Korean CMV population revealed genetic evidence for the host-adaptive evolution of CMV (Fig. 1) . In particular, most CMV isolates from pepper were genetically grouped together and their degree of divergence was significantly low, suggesting that host-driven selective constraints may restrict CMV population diversity in pepper ( Fig. 1 and Table 3 ). Further, our global-scale phylogenetic analysis of the CMV population structure revealed some patterns of hostadaptive evolution of CMV in pepper and tomato ( Fig. 2 and Supplementary Fig. S1 ). The host-adaptive evolution of CMV was previously suggested after the biological characterization of some CMV isolates from lily and soybean, as these isolates demonstrated restricted host range (Masuta et al. 2002; Hong et al. 2007; Lee et al. 2007) . Many CMV strains induced mosaic symptoms in tobacco plants and systemically infected cucurbits but not lilies; however, CMV lily isolates (HL, Ly2, and Ly8) and were unable to infect cucurbits and displayed distinct pathogenicity in tobacco plants (Masuta et al. 2002; Lee et al. 2007 ). Host adaptation of CMV lily isolates was evident at the genetic level since they formed a separated cluster within subgroup I in the phylogenetic trees (Figs 1 and 2) . Similarly, some CMV isolates from soybean demonstrated specific host range and distinct pathogenicity (Hong et al. 2007 ). Phylogenetic analyses suggested that the MP of CMV soybean isolates was under high evolutionary constraint (Hong et al. 2007) . Since the MP is involved in virus movement within a host, host-imposed constraints might affect the evolution of the MP gene. The divergence level in RNA1 was significantly higher than in other RNAs in the Korean CMV population (Table 3) , which suggests that each CMV RNA has evolved under different constraints. Each viral component being subjected to different evolutionary dynamics has been reported for various RNA viruses (Garcia-Arenal et al. 2001; Seo et al. 2009c; Kim et al. 2014) . Viruses are obligate parasites that require numerous host factors at every stage of infection; therefore, the degree of selective constraint on a viral protein is often highly associated with its interactions with host factors. CMV RNA1 encodes the 1a protein, which is entirely associated with vacuolar membranes, but contains no transmembrane domains, indicating that the 1a protein interacts with host proteins on vacuolar membranes to be recruited (Palukaitis and Garcia-Arenal 2003) . Thus, it seems likely that evolution of the 1a protein is highly constrained by compatibility with host-interacting proteins. Our phylogenetic and diversity analyses of the Korean CMV population suggest that host-imposed constraints on RNA1 have likely played an essential role in the host-adaptive evolution of CMV and in shaping the structure of the CMV population. In crop fields, genotypic variations in host plant resistance can significantly influence virus population dynamics and evolution, because host resistance can act as a selective pressure on the virus population, forcing rapid adaptation to new circumstances (Fabre et al. 2009; Janzac et al. 2009; Jones 2009 ). Indeed, the widespread use of resistant cultivars has contributed to the emergence of resistance-breaking variants of several plant viruses (Harrison 2002; Garcia-Arenal and McDonald 2003; Elena et al. 2014 ). Our phylogenetic analyses revealed that CMV resistance-breaking variants might have recently evolved from the CMV pepper population (Fig. 1) . In Korea, the deployment of host resistance has been applied to control CMV in pepper fields since the 1990s (Choi et al. 2005; Lee et al. 2009 ). However, resistance-breaking variants have continuously emerged and CMV continues to cause the most severe damage in Korean pepper crops (Lee et al. 2006; Kim et al. 2014; Choi et al. 2015) . Our haplotype network analyses suggested that selective evolution in RNA1 appears to be in progress in the CMV pepper population (Fig. 3) . In Korea, breeding and cultivation of pepper cultivars resistant to CMV pathotypes P0 and P1 have gradually increased since the identification of the dominant genes that confer resistance to these CMV pathotypes in the early 2010s (Choi et al. 2018; Kang et al. 2010) . Therefore, the recent emergence of CMV resistance-breaking variants and selective evolution in RNA1 may be a result of deployed resistance as a selective pressure in pepper fields. Although most mutations are negatively selected in susceptible hosts, a lineage carrying beneficial mutations can arise when host resistance exerts strong selective pressures on a virus population to overcome that resistance, resulting in resistance-breaking (Elena et al. 2014) . To identify mutations responsible for resistance-breaking in pepper, we utilized infectious cDNA clones of two representative CMV strains with different virulences in pepper. By analyzing the virulence of pseudo-recombinants and chimeric mutants between the two strains, we demonstrated that two nonsynonymous mutations in RNA1 (at nucleotide positions 852 and 1752) are responsible for resistance-breaking in pepper ( Fig. 6 and Supplementary Fig. S3 ). These nonsynonymous mutations caused amino acid substitutions at positions 253 and 553 in the 1a protein encoded in RNA1, respectively. Therefore, this result proved our assumption obtained from genetic analyses of the CMV population for the mechanism underlying the recent emergence of resistance-breaking variants in pepper. In other words, the high-divergence capacity of RNA1 may enhance the host-adaptive evolution of CMV and the rapid appearance of resistance-breaking variants. Alterations in CMV virulence upon nonsynonymous mutations in RNA1 have been shown in previous studies (Diveki et al. 2004; Kang et al. 2012; Tian et al. 2020) . Amino acid substitutions at the C-terminus of the 1a protein were responsible for overcoming Cmr1-based resistance by CMV-P1 in pepper (Kang et al. 2012 ). In addition, several single amino acid substitutions in the 1a protein were independently responsible for determining the pathogenicity of CMV in tobacco and Arabidopsis (Diveki et al. 2004; Tian et al. 2020) . Although the majority of nonsynonymous mutations in viral genes are deleterious because they can negatively affect normal gene function at the protein level, some rare nonsynonymous mutations with neutral or minimal effects may result in overcoming host resistance by abolishing interactions with resistance proteins (Elena et al. 2014; Moreno-Perez et al. 2016) . Nonsynonymous mutations at positions 852 and 1752 in RNA1 demonstrated no significant effects on the normal function of the 1a protein because both CMV-P1 and -GTN successfully infected susceptible host plants (Fig. 6) . Instead, these mutations are more likely to abolish recognition of the 1a protein by unidentified resistance proteins, thereby causing resistance breaking. In addition, while amino acid mutations at positions 253 and 553 independently conferred virulence to CMV in the pepper cultivar Baerota (Fig. 6B) , each mutation affected the pathogenicity of CMV differently as demonstrated by distinct symptoms induced by CMV mutants carrying each mutation. In particular, the amino acid substitution from Pro to Ser at position 553 in the 1a protein resulted in changing symptomatology as well as virulence (Fig. 6B ). Alteration of virus pathogenicity by a single amino acid change has been observed in many viruses (Lewandowski and Dawson 1993; Shintaku et al. 1992; Masuta et al. 1999; Seo et al. 2009b) . In CMV, alteration in symptom severity was also observed when the single amino acid substitution of Pro for Ser at position 129 was introduced into the CP (Shintaku 1991) . Because Pro and Ser frequently substitute for each other in nature, they may have similar conformational characteristics in protein structures (Petsko and Ringe 2004; Schroter et al. 2014) . As substitutions from Pro to Ser in the 1a protein demonstrated no significant effect on the infectivity of CMV in the susceptible host, N.benthamiana (Fig. 6) , it is likely that the amino acid at position 129 in the 1a protein may be involved in interactions with host partners that are associated with pathogenicity in pepper. Understanding the mechanisms that influence the evolutionary direction of virus populations is essential for the development of more durable strategies to control viral diseases in crop fields. In pepper, various sources of resistance to CMV have been identified and utilized to breed resistant cultivars (Caranta et al. 1997; Caranta et al. 2002; Kang et al. 2010; Yao et al. 2013; Choi et al. 2018) . Despite extensive efforts to control CMV by deploying resistance in the field, variants capable of overcoming deployed resistance have continuously emerged, and CMV remains the prevalent and most destructive virus in pepper crops. Resistance-driven selective pressure combined with the high evolutionary capacity of CMV might have contributed to the unique evolution of CMV in pepper. Our molecular genetic analyses of resistance-breaking CMV variants suggest that the evolution of the CMV population driven by host resistance is ongoing in the pepper field. Our results also suggest that overreliance on the deployment of a single resistance gene may reduce resistance durability against CMV in the short term. Therefore, more integrated approaches that complement host resistance are necessary for successful control of CMV in pepper. All data are available within this manuscript and its supplementary materials. Supplementary data are available at Virus Evolution online. 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Conflict of interest: None declared.