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Dive into the research topics where Simona Kraberger is active.

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Featured researches published by Simona Kraberger.


Virology | 2016

Ongoing geographical spread of Tomato yellow leaf curl virus

Batsirai Mabvakure; Darren P. Martin; Simona Kraberger; Leendert J Cloete; Sharon van Brunschot; Andrew D. W. Geering; J. E. Thomas; Kaveh Bananej; Jean-Michel Lett; Pierre Lefeuvre; Arvind Varsani; Gordon William Harkins

Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) seriously impacts tomato production throughout tropical and sub-tropical regions of the world. It has a broad geographical distribution and continues to spread to new regions in the Indian and Pacific Oceans including Australia, New Caledonia and Mauritius. We undertook a temporally-scaled, phylogeographic analysis of all publicly available, full genome sequences of TYLCV, together with 70 new genome sequences from Australia, Iran and Mauritius. This revealed that whereas epidemics in Australia and China likely originated through multiple independent viral introductions from the East-Asian region around Japan and Korea, the New Caledonian epidemic was seeded by a variant from the Western Mediterranean region and the Mauritian epidemic by a variant from the neighbouring island of Reunion. Finally, we show that inter-continental scale movements of TYLCV to East Asia have, at least temporarily, ceased, whereas long-distance movements to the Americas and Australia are probably still ongoing.


Virus Research | 2017

Identification of a Nanovirus-Alphasatellite Complex in Sophora alopecuroides

Jahangir Heydarnejad; Mehdi Kamali; Hossain Massumi; Anders Kvarnheden; Maketalena F. Male; Simona Kraberger; Daisy Stainton; Darren P. Martin; Arvind Varsani

Viruses in the genus Nanovirus of the family Nanoviridae generally have eight individually encapsidated circular genome components and have been predominantly found infecting Fabaceae plants in Europe, Australia, Africa and Asia. For over a decade Sophora alopecuroides L. (Fabaceae) plants have been observed across Iran displaying dwarfing, yellowing, stunted leaves and yellow vein banding. Using a high-throughput sequencing approach, sequences were identified within one such plant that had similarities to nanovirus genome components. From this plant, the nanovirus-like molecules DNA-R (n=4), DNA-C (n=2), DNA-S (n=1), DNA-M (n=1), DNA-N (n=1), DNA-U1 (n=1), DNA-U2 (n=1) and DNA-U4 (n=1) were amplified, cloned and sequenced. Other than for the DNA-R, these components share less than 71% identity with those of other known nanoviruses. The four DNA-R molecules were highly diverse, sharing only 65-71% identity with each other and 64-86% identity with those of other nanoviruses. In the S. alopecuroides plant 14 molecules sharing 57.7-84.6% identity with previously determined sequences of nanovirus-associated alphasatellites were also identified. Given the research activity in the nanovirus field during the last five years coupled with high-throughput sequence technologies, many more diverse nanoviruses and nanovirus-associated satellites are likely to be identified.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Genome Sequences of Beet curly top Iran virus, Oat dwarf virus, Turnip curly top virus, and Wheat dwarf virus Identified in Leafhoppers

Mehdi Kamali; Jahangir Heydarnejad; Najmeh Pouramini; Hossain Masumi; Kata Farkas; Simona Kraberger; Arvind Varsani

ABSTRACT Implementation of a vector-enabled metagenomics approach resulted in the identification of various geminiviruses. We identified the genome sequences of Beet curly top Iran virus, Turnip curly top viruses, Oat dwarf viruses, the first from Iran, and Wheat dwarf virus from leafhoppers feeding on beet, parsley, pumpkin, and turnip plants.


Archives of Virology | 2017

Identification of a polyomavirus in Weddell seal (Leptonychotes weddellii) from the Ross Sea (Antarctica)

Arvind Varsani; Greg Frankfurter; Daisy Stainton; Maketalena F. Male; Simona Kraberger; Jennifer M. Burns

AbstractViruses are ubiquitous in nature, however, very few have been identified that are associated with Antarctic animals. Here we report the identification of a polyomavirus in the kidney tissue of a deceased Weddell seal from the Ross Sea, Antarctica. The circular genome (5186 nt) has typical features of polyomaviruses with a small and larger T-antigen open reading frames (ORFs) and three ORFs encoding VP1, VP2 and VP3 capsid proteins. The genome of the Weddell seal polyomavirus (WsPyV) shares 85.4% genome-wide pairwise identity with a polyomavirus identified in a California sea lion. To our knowledge WsPyV is the first viral genome identified in Antarctic pinnipeds and the third polyomavirus to be identified from an Antarctic animal, the other two being from Adélie penguin (Pygoscelis adeliae) and a sharp-spined notothen (Trematomus pennellii), both sampled in the Ross sea.n The GenBank accession number: KX533457.


Biological Reviews | 2018

Towards an eco-phylogenetic framework for infectious disease ecology

Nicholas M. Fountain-Jones; William D. Pearse; Luis E. Escobar; Ana Alba-Casals; Scott Carver; T. Jonathan Davies; Simona Kraberger; Monica Papeş; Kurt J. Vandegrift; Katherine Worsley-Tonks; Meggan E. Craft

Identifying patterns and drivers of infectious disease dynamics across multiple scales is a fundamental challenge for modern science. There is growing awareness that it is necessary to incorporate multi‐host and/or multi‐parasite interactions to understand and predict current and future disease threats better, and new tools are needed to help address this task. Eco‐phylogenetics (phylogenetic community ecology) provides one avenue for exploring multi‐host multi‐parasite systems, yet the incorporation of eco‐phylogenetic concepts and methods into studies of host pathogen dynamics has lagged behind. Eco‐phylogenetics is a transformative approach that uses evolutionary history to infer present‐day dynamics. Here, we present an eco‐phylogenetic framework to reveal insights into parasite communities and infectious disease dynamics across spatial and temporal scales. We illustrate how eco‐phylogenetic methods can help untangle the mechanisms of host–parasite dynamics from individual (e.g. co‐infection) to landscape scales (e.g. parasite/host community structure). An improved ecological understanding of multi‐host and multi‐pathogen dynamics across scales will increase our ability to predict disease threats.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Novel Single-Stranded DNA Virus Genomes Recovered from Chimpanzee Feces Sampled from the Mambilla Plateau in Nigeria

Matthew Walters; Musa Bawuro; Alfred Christopher; Alexander Knight; Simona Kraberger; Daisy Stainton; Hazel M. Chapman; Arvind Varsani

ABSTRACT Metagenomic approaches are rapidly expanding our knowledge of the diversity of viruses. In the fecal matter of Nigerian chimpanzees we recovered three gokushovirus genomes, one circular replication-associated protein encoding single-stranded DNA virus (CRESS), and a CRESS DNA molecule.


Virus Evolution | 2015

The global distribution of Banana bunchy top virus reveals little evidence for frequent recent, human-mediated long distance dispersal events

Daisy Stainton; Darren P. Martin; Brejnev Muhire; Samiuela Lolohea; Mana’ia Halafihi; P. Lepoint; Guy Blomme; Kathleen S. Crew; Murray Sharman; Simona Kraberger; Anisha Dayaram; Matthew Walters; David A. Collings; Batsirai Mabvakure; Philippe Lemey; Gordon William Harkins; J. E. Thomas; Arvind Varsani


Microbiology Resource Announcements | 2018

Genome Sequence of a Gyrovirus Associated with Ashy Storm-Petrel

Kara Waits; Russell W. Bradley; Pete Warzybok; Simona Kraberger; Rafaela S. Fontenele; Arvind Varsani


Journal of Virology | 2018

Feline Leukemia Virus (FeLV) Disease Outcomes in a Domestic Cat Breeding Colony: Relationship to Endogenous FeLV and Other Chronic Viral Infections

Jordan A. Powers; Elliott Chiu; Simona Kraberger; Melody Roelke-Parker; Isabella Lowery; Katelyn Erbeck; Ryan M. Troyer; Scott Carver; Sue VandeWoude


Archive | 2017

Metagenomics-based discovery and molecular characterization of a novel sugarcane mastrevirus. [P13]

Emmanuel Fernandez; Wardatou Boukari; Ricardo I. Alcala-Briseño; Simona Kraberger; Denis Filloux; Jean-Michel Lett; Pierre Lefeuvre; Jack C. Comstock; Jean-Heinrich Daugrois; Arvind Varsani; Jane E. Polston; Philippe Rott; Philippe Roumagnac

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Arvind Varsani

Arizona State University

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Daisy Stainton

University of Canterbury

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J. E. Thomas

University of Queensland

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Pierre Lefeuvre

University of La Réunion

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Jack C. Comstock

United States Department of Agriculture

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