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1.
Leaves of tobacco plants inoculated with tobacco mosaic virus were divided into three groups: ( a ) inoculated leaves; ( b ) younger non-inoculated leaves present at the time of inoculation; ( c ) leaves formed since inoculation. The respiration rate of each group was compared with that of similar leaves from healthy plants. The respiration rate of inoculated leaves was increased by a constant amount for 3 weeks after inoculation, when it decreased. The respiration rate of group ( b ) leaves was not affected at any time, and that of group ( c ) leaves was decreased by 10% when they showed symptoms. The increased respiration in the inoculated leaves occurred too soon to reflect virus formation, and it is suggested that it reflects an initial change in infected cells preparatory to virus synthesis. The subsequent decrease in respiration may be due to the accumulation of virus which does not contribute to the total leaf respiration.  相似文献   

2.
The rate of photosynthesis of tobacco leaves infected with the Rothamsted type culture of tobacco mosaic virus was lower than that of comparable healthy tobacco leaves. The lower rate was inferred from Net Assimilation Rates of whole plants and confirmed by direct comparisons of photosynthetic rates of inoculated and healthy leaves. The effect began within 1 hr. of inoculation. It was not caused by an effect of the virus on the stomata, and inactivated virus inoculum did not change the rates. The results indicate either a more rapid movement of virus from the epidermis into the chlorenchyma than has been previously recorded or an effect of virus infection at a site distant from the cells containing virus.  相似文献   

3.
The rate of CO, production per g. dry matter of the younger leaves of tobacco plants systemically infected with tobacco mosaic virus was about 10 yo less than that of comparable healthy leaves. Older infected leaves, showing well-developed mosaic symptoms, had the same respiration rate as comparable healthy leaves. These results were independent of seasonal change in light conditions during the growth of the plants. Older leaves, but not younger leaves, of infected plants had a lower initial water content, and both absorbed less water during the experimental period, than leaves from healthy plants. The effects of TMV infection on water content were so great that the rate of CO, production per g. fresh weight was sometimes significantly increased by infection. This reversal of the apparent effect of infection on respiration rate, depending on the basis of reference may partly account for contradictory results reported previously by other workers. Other causes for contradictory results are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
An attempt was made to find the causes of increased susceptibility to virus infection when tobacco plants are kept in the dark before inoculation. The changes in certain nitrogen fractions, viz. insoluble-N, amino-N, amide-N, ammonia-N and nitrate-N, and in dry matter and water content were followed in tobacco plants subjected to a period of darkness before inoculation with tobacco aucuba mosaic virus. Only nitrate-N was strongly correlated with the susceptibility to infection, but the evidence suggests that the correlation is indirect and not causal.
Dry matter and water content, determined either as dry matter percentage of fresh weight or measured separately on a leaf-disk basis Ivere found to vary directly with variation in susceptibility.  相似文献   

5.
The rates of respiration and of photosynthesis of tobacco leaves infected with potato virus X were not affected until the leaves showed symptoms; the respiration rate was then increased by more than 30% and the photosynthesis rate decreased by 20%. When local lesions appeared on the leaves of Nicotiana glutinosa infected with tobacco mosaic virus, but not before, the respiration rate was increased by an amount, up to 30%, that varied with the number of lesions. The photosynthesis rate was decreased by 20%, but there was no effect on photosynthesis or respiration until symptoms appeared. These results differ from those previously reported for tobacco leaves infected with tobacco mosaic virus, in which both respiration and photosynthesis were affected within 1 hr. of inoculation. The validity of extrapolating arguments based on the results obtained with other combinations to this commonly used combination and vice-versa is questioned.  相似文献   

6.
Unlike tobacco mosaic virus, which increases the respiration of tobacco leaves within an hour of their being inoculated, a virulent strain of tobacco etch virus did not change respiration rates until leaves showed external symptoms. The respiration rates of inoculated or systemically infected leaves with symptoms rose to 40% above that of healthy leaves, three times the increase produced by tobacco mosaic virus. The increased respiration rate occurred at all times of the year and was maintained through the life of the leaves.
Leaves infected with tobacco etch virus and showing symptoms had a photo-synthetic rate 20% lower than that of healthy leaves.  相似文献   

7.
Normal and tobacco mosaic-diseased Turkish tobacco plants were grown in sand for a period of several weeks, during which they were fed daily a complete nutrient solution to which had been added disodium phosphate containing radioactive phosphorus. Determinations were made of the distribution of radioactive phosphorus in different fractions such as the wash from the sand and roots, the press cake obtained on pressing the juice from the plants, the protein and protein-free portions of the supernatant liquids obtained on ultracentrifugation of the juices, and the purified tobacco mosaic virus isolated from the diseased plants. Chemical analyses as well as radiographs of the normal and diseased leaves indicated that they contained the same amount of phosphorus. Approximately 30 per cent of the radioactive phosphorus absorbed by the diseased plants was found to be combined with the purified tobacco mosaic virus that was isolated from these plants. Following the inoculation of purified tobacco mosaic virus possessing high radioactivity to normal Turkish tobacco plants, most of the radioactivity was found to be associated with non-virus components of which about 40 per cent was in the inoculated and 60 per cent in the uninoculated portions of the plants. Although a small amount of radioactive virus was isolated from the uninoculated portions of the plants, it was impossible, because of a number of complicating factors which have been discussed, to draw from the results any reliable conclusions regarding the mode of reproduction of tobacco mosaic virus.  相似文献   

8.
Infection with tobacco mosaic virus decreases the water content which detached tobacco leaves attain when kept for 20 hr. in conditions of minimum water stress, and does so more when the plants are kept in light before inoculation than when they are kept in darkness. No such effects of infection during the first day after inoculation were obtained with tobacco leaves infected with either tobacco etch virus or potato virus X , or with Nicotiana glutinosa leaves infected with tobacco mosaic virus. These results, like those showing early effects of TMV on respiration and photosynthesis of tobacco leaves, suggest that inoculation with TMV affects deeper leaf tissues than the epidermis earlier in tobacco leaves than in other leaves, and earlier than other viruses in tobacco leaves.  相似文献   

9.
Beans inoculated with tobacco necrosis virus were kept in the dark at different temperatures for 1 hr. before and 1 hr. after inoculation; in this experiment the number of lesions increased with temperature over the range 55–82° F.
The effect of 30 min. periods of darkness before or after inoculation depended on the time of day, the number of local lesions usually being decreased. Prolonging the night period before inoculation sometimes increased the number of lesions.
Light appeared to be more important than temperature in controlling the daily variation in susceptibility. However, in a test over a 30 hr. period this variation continued even when plants were placed under constant conditions before and after inoculation.
When plants that had been kept in the dark were exposed to light of about 800 f.c. intensity for 1 min. immediately before inoculation the number of local lesions was doubled.  相似文献   

10.
The inhibition of infection by tobacco necrosis and tobacco mosaic viruses by tannic acid, and by extracts of raspberry and strawberry leaves, was associated with the precipitation of the viruses. Precipitation and inhibition were reversible, and infective virus was obtained from the precipitate formed between the viruses and tannins. Infectivity was fully restored by diluting mixtures of virus and tannin adequately and partially restored by adding alumina or nicotine sulphate.
Viruses and tannins are thought to form non-infective complexes, in which the virus and tannin components are held together by co-ordinate linkages or hydrogen bonds.
Macerating tobacco leaves infected with tobacco mosaic virus together with raspberry leaves greatly decreased the infectivity of the extracts; adding nicotine sulphate to the mixture of leaves before it was ground increased the infectivity, even though nicotine sulphate alone decreases the infectivity of tobacco mosaic virus. Even in the presence of nicotine sulphate, much of the virus was precipitated by substances from the raspberry leaves.
Extracts of roots of Fragaria vesca plants, infected with a tobacco necrosis virus, were more infective when made by macerating the roots with four times their weight of buffer at pH 8 than when made without buffer. Various methods are suggested for facilitating the transmission of viruses from plants that contain tannin.  相似文献   

11.
Transgenic tobacco plants expressing the coat protein (CP) gene of tobacco mosaic virus were tested for resistance against infection by five other tobamoviruses sharing 45-82% homology in CP amino acid sequence with the CP of tobacco mosaic virus. The transgenic plants (CP+) showed significant delays in systemic disease development after inoculation with tomato mosaic virus or tobacco mild green mosaic virus compared to the control (CP-) plants, but showed no resistance against infection by ribgrass mosaic virus. On a transgenic local lesion host, the CP+ plants showed greatly reduced numbers of necrotic lesions compared to the CP- plants after inoculation with tomato mosaic virus, pepper mild mottle virus, tobacco mild green mosaic virus, and Odontoglossum ringspot virus but not ribgrass mosaic virus. The implications of these results are discussed in relation to the possible mechanism(s) of CP-mediated protection.  相似文献   

12.
The effects on susceptibility to infection with certain viruses of subjecting plants to various periods of darkness or reduced illumination before and after inoculation were tested. The viruses and hosts used were a tobacco necrosis virus in French bean and tobacco; tomato aucuba mosaic virus in tobacco; and tobacco mosaic and tomato bushy stunt viruses in Nicotiana glutinosa . All the virus-host combinations give necrotic local lesions, and susceptibility was measured by local lesion counts. Susceptibility was consistently increased by pre-inoculation treatments of host plants, whereas post-inoculation treatments had relatively little effect, but most often decreased susceptibility.
Short periods in the dark produced similar responses to longer periods in shade, but the different plants varied in their response to, and tolerance of, darkness. The maximum number of lesions was usually obtained with bean plants kept for only 24 hr. in the dark before inoculation, but with tobacco plants susceptibility increased with increasing time in the dark up to 5 days.
It is suggested that the successful establishment of infection occurs in two stages, the first of which is affected by. the accumulation of photosynthetic products. Whether these products confer resistance by increasing cell turgor or by reacting specifically with virus particles is unknown, but sap from plants in the light possesses no greater virus-inhibiting power than sap from plants kept in the dark.  相似文献   

13.
1. Denatured tobacco mosaic virus has a number of SH groups corresponding to its total sulfur content of 0.2 per cent. The SH groups were estimated by titration with ferricyanide, tetrathionate, and p-chloromercuribenzoate in guanidine hydrochloride solution and by reduction of the uric acid reagent in urea solution. 2. The SH groups of tobacco mosaic virus or their precursors can be abolished by reaction of the native form of the virus with iodine. 3. Tobacco mosaic virus whose SH groups have been oxidized beyond the S-S stage by iodine but whose tyrosine groups have not been converted into di-iodotyrosine groups still retains its normal biological activity as shown by the number of lesions it causes on Nicotiana glutinosa plants and by the characteristic disease produced in Turkish tobacco plants. 4. The inoculation of Turkish tobacco plants with active virus whose SH groups have been abolished by iodine results in the production of virus with the normal number of SH groups. 5. If enough iodine is added to tobacco mosaic virus or if the iodine reaction is carried out at a sufficiently high temperature, then the tyrosine groups are converted into di-iodotyrosine groups and the virus is inactivated. 6. Tobacco mosaic virus can be almost completely inactivated by iodoacetamide under conditions under which iodoacetamide reacts with few if any of the protein''s SH groups. 7. Tobacco mosaic virus is not inactivated by dilute p-chloromercuribenzoate.  相似文献   

14.
Expression of a chimeric gene encoding the coat protein (CP) of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) in transgenic tobacco plants confers resistance to infection by TMV. We investigated the spread of TMV within the inoculated leaf and throughout the plant following inoculation. Plants that expressed the CP gene [CP(+)] and those that did not [CP(-)] accumulated equivalent amounts of virus in the inoculated leaves after inoculation with TMV-RNA, but the CP(+) plants showed a delay in the development of systemic symptoms and reduced virus accumulation in the upper leaves. Tissue printing experiments demonstrated that if TMV infection became systemic, spread of virus occurred in the CP(+) plants essentially as it occurred in the CP(-) plants although at a reduced rate. Through a series of grafting experiments, we showed that stem tissue with a leaf attached taken from CP(+) plants prevented the systemic spread of virus. Stem tissue without a leaf had no effect on TMV spread. All of these findings indicate that protection against systemic spread in CP(+) plants is caused by one or more mechanisms that, in correlation with the protection against initial infection upon inoculation, result in a phenotype of resistance to TMV.  相似文献   

15.
Effects of virus inhibitors on the infection of tobacco protoplasts with tobacco mosaic virus Yeast extract inhibits the infection of Nicotiana glutinosa plants with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), whereas in N. sandérae yeast extract is not effective. This phenomena was compared with the effect of yeast extract on protoplasts, and on the infection of protoplasts of both tobacco species with TMV. Additionally, skim milk and ribonuclease were included in the experiments as further inhibitors of early stages of virus infection. It was examined whether these inhibitors damage non-inoculated protoplasts (a), and whether they affect virus infections in protoplasts as they do in cells of intact plants (b). To investigate protoplast damage by the inhibitors, conductivity measurements of protoplast suspensions containing inhibitors, and the ability of protoplasts for cell wall regeneration after treatment with the inhibitors, were used. Inhibitor concentrations which prevent virus infections in plants did not damage the protoplasts. The inhibitor effect on the course of infection was investigated by protoplast treatments before, during and after inoculation with TMV, and by addition of the substances to the culture medium. Measurements of virus content in protoplasts after cultivation revealed different results for the three inhibitors, however, there was no difference in the response of protoplasts from the two tobacco species to yeast extract. It is concluded that there are principal differences between the inhibition of plant and protoplast infections. Therefore, it is unlikely that protoplasts are a useful system for the mode of action studies on inhibitors of early stages of virus infection in plants.  相似文献   

16.
Sulfur-induced resistance, also known as sulfur-enhanced defense (SIR/SED) was investigated in Nicotiana tabacum cv. Samsun nn during compatible interaction with Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) in correlation with glutathione metabolism. To evaluate the influence of sulfur nutritional status on virus infection, tobacco plants were treated with nutrient solutions containing either sufficient sulfate (+S) or no sulfate (-S). Sufficient sulfate supply resulted in a suppressed and delayed symptom development and diminished virus accumulation over a period of 14 days after inoculation as compared with -S conditions. Expression of the defense marker gene PR-1a was markedly upregulated in sulfate-treated plants during the first day after TMV inoculation. The occurrence of SIR/SED correlated with a higher level of activity of sulfate assimilation, cysteine, and glutathione metabolism in plants treated with sulfate. Additionally, two key genes involved in cysteine and glutathione biosynthesis (encoding adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate reductase and γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase, respectively) were upregulated within the first day after TMV inoculation under +S conditions. Sulfate withdrawal from the soil was accelerated at the beginning of the infection, whereas it declined in the long term, leading to an accumulation of sulfur in the soil of plants grown with sulfate. This observation could be correlated with a decrease in sulfur contents in TMV-infected leaves in the long term. In summary, this is the first study that demonstrates a link between the activation of cysteine and glutathione metabolism and the induction of SIR/SED during a compatible plant-virus interaction in tobacco plants, indicating a general mechanism behind SIR/SED.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of fucoidan from the brown alga Fucus evanescens on the spread of infection induced by tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) was investigated in the leaves of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) of two cultivars (Ksanti-nk and Samsun). In the leaves of cv. Ksanti-nk inoculated with a mixture of TMV preparation (2 μg/ml) and fucoidan (1 mg/ml), the number of local necrotic lesions induced by the virus decreased by more than 90% as compared with the leaves inoculated with the virus alone. In tobacco leaves of cv. Samsun, virulence and the concentration of the virus 3 days after inoculation with the same mixture of TMV and fucoidan were by 62 and 66%, respectively, lower than in the leaves inoculated with TMV alone. As the infection spread, the inhibitory effect of fucoidan decreased. When the leaves were treated with fucoidan before and after the inoculation with TMV, its antiviral activity was less pronounced than when a mixture of the virus and the polysaccharide was used as inoculum. Electron microscopic investigation of TMV mixed with fucoidan often showed agglutinated virions. The highest virulence of the mixture (TMV preparation, 12 μg/ml, plus fucoidan, 1 mg/ml) was observed upon its twofold dilution, and after that it decreased. It was concluded that, when the leaves were inoculated with the mixture of TMV and fucoidan, the latter affected not only the plant but the virus as well. Treatment of tobacco leaves, cv. Ksanti-nk, with actinomycin D (10 μg/ml) 24 h before the inoculation with TMV almost completely suppressed the effect of fucoidan, indicating that fucoidan acted at a gene level.  相似文献   

18.
With tomato spotted wilt virus in petunia leaf strips, N-6 benzyladenine (BA) was as effective as kinetin in decreasing numbers of local lesions, a result which could not be attributed to an effect on the virus per se. Benzimidazole, adenine and ammonium nitrate were without effect. Benzyladenine was more effective than kinetin when supplied through the petioles of excised whole leaves. Local lesions and infectivity of TSWV in detached leaves of Nicotiana rustica were decreased by supplying BA before and after inoculation. Lesions and infectivity were also decreased in attached leaves when BA was applied 9 days before inoculation. BA supplied to attached leaves after inoculation increased infectivity. Supplying BA to the lower leaves of tomato plants before inoculating with TSWV decreased infectivity of unsprayed, systemically infected tip leaves taken as inoculum; BA supplied after inoculation increased infectivity. Local lesions caused by lucerne mosaic virus in excised leaves of Phaseolus vulgaris were decreased in number by supplying BA. The effects of pre- and post-inoculation sprays of BA are considered in relation to cell metabolism. Since pretreating leaves with kinins did not prevent infection, it is suggested that those which move freely through plants without adverse effects on normal growth may prove of value in increasing the tolerance of plants to virus infection.  相似文献   

19.
THE INOCULATION OF TOBACCO CALLUS TISSUE WITH TOBACCO MOSAIC VIRUS   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Although cultures of normal and conditioned tobacco callus tissue occasionally became infected when dilute solutions of tobacco mosaic virus was poured over them, injuries were usually required, and the number of infections depended on the type and number of injuries. Tissues infected by superficial injuries usually became virus-free after subculturing, whereas those infected by needle-prick remained infected permanently. Although no plasmodesmata were found joining cells in the tissue cultures, tobacco mosaic virus moved between them at a rate of about 1 mm. per week, approximately the same rate as it moves through cells of the leaf parenchyma.  相似文献   

20.
ASSEMBLY AND AGGREGATION OF TOBACCO MOSAIC VIRUS IN TOMATO LEAFLETS   总被引:5,自引:5,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Cells of tomato leaflets (Lycopersicum esculentum Mill.) were studied by phase and electron microscopy at various intervals after inoculation with a common strain of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). Forty-eight hours after inoculation, prior to the development of assayable virus, individual TMV particles, and also particle aggregates, were observed in the ground cytoplasm of mesophyll cells. The most rapid synthesis of virus occurred between 80 and 300 hours after inoculation. Cytological changes during this time were characterized by an increased number of individual particles in the cytoplasm, growth of some aggregates, distortion and vacuolation of chloroplasts, and formation of filaments in the cytoplasm which were approximately four times the size of TMV. These filaments were interpreted as possible developmental forms of the TMV particle. Vacuoles in chloroplasts commonly contained virus particles. Evidence indicated that TMV was assembled in the ground cytoplasm and, in some cases, subsequently was enveloped by distorted chloroplasts.  相似文献   

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