
Peaches infected with Xanthomonas arboricola pv. pruni
Image Credit: Scientific Frontline
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Genomic Stability of Plant-Associated Bacteriophages
The Core Concept: Researchers have discovered that specific bacteriophages infecting agriculturally significant bacterial plant pathogens can remain genetically stable for decades, challenging the widespread assumption that all viruses mutate rapidly.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: While most viruses exhibit pervasive genomic mosaicism and rapid evolution, these newly characterized plant-associated phages demonstrate remarkable genomic stability—maintaining greater than 95% nucleotide identity over 40 years—alongside localized adaptive divergence in accessory loci.
Origin/History: The discovery stems from an analysis of 15 phage genomes isolated from North Carolina peach orchards over an approximate 40-year period, specifically targeting viruses that infect the peach pathogen Xanthomonas arboricola pv. pruni.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- The classification of a novel phage genus and species, Duraznoxanthovirus arenicola, which exclusively infects the Xanthomonas peach pathogen.
- A proposed broader taxonomic restructuring within the family Anamaviridae, introducing a new subfamily (Terravirinae) and two new genera (Duraznoxanthovirus and Ralstopathovirus).
- The establishment of scale-aware ecological frameworks to understand how spatial structure, host population genetics, and environmental heterogeneity shape infection outcomes and microbial community dynamics.

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