In the attempt to identify the causal agent of Citrus chlorotic dwarf disease (CCDD), a virus-like disorder
of citrus, the small RNA fraction and total DNA from symptomatic citrus plants were subjected to highthroughput
sequencing. DNA fragments deriving from an apparently new geminivirus-like agent were
found and assembled by NGS to re-construct the entire viral genome. The newly identified virus has a
circular single-stranded DNA genome comprising five open reading frames (ORFs) with sequence
homologies with those encoded by geminiviruses. PCR and qPCR assays were successfully used for
determining its presence in the CCDD-affected plants obtained by graft propagation. The larger genome
size (3.64 vs. 2.5–3.0 kb) and a number of differences in its structural organization, identified this virus
as a highly divergent member of the family Geminiviridae, to which the provisional name of Citrus
chlorotic dwarf-associated virus (CCDaV) is assigned
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