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1.
A sap-transmissible virus, provisionally named Sri Lankan passion fruit mottle virus (SLPFMV), was isolated from Passiflora edulis f. flavicarpa and shown to induce leaf mottling and distortion in that host. The virus infected 23 species in five plant families with systemic infection being common in the Passifloraceae. Chenopodium amaranticolor was a good local lesion host and Passiflora foetida was a useful systemic host for purification. In P. foetida extracts, SLPFMV lost infectivity after 10 min between 70–75°C, 6–7 days at 20–23°C and at dilutions of 10--5 -W-6. The virus had flexuous, filamentous particles with a normal length of c. 841 nm. Two polypeptides of mol. wt c. 33 200 and 28 700 were detected in purified virus preparations, and a major species of double-stranded RNA (mol. wt 7.0 × 106), was detected in infected plants. Pinwheels, tubular and laminated inclusions were found in ultrathin sections of infected P. edulis f. plavicurpa and cylindrical inclusions were observed in epidermal strips. SLPFMV was transmitted by the aphids Myzus persicae, Aphis spiraecola, A. gossypü and A. cruccivora after brief acquisition feeds. SLPFMV reacted with antisera to several potyviruses including passion fruit woodiness virus, passion fruit ringspot virus, potato virus Y and watermelon mosaic virus 2 and thus, apparently, is a member of the potyvirus group.  相似文献   

2.
A sap-transmissible virus obtained from cassava with a green mottle disease occurring at Choiseul, Solomon Islands, was transmitted to 30 species in 12 plant families and was readily seed-borne in Nicotiana clevelandii. In cassava plants infected by inoculation with sap, the first leaves to be infected systemically developed a mottle with some necrosis whereas leaves produced subsequently were symptomless but contained the virus. Most other species developed chlorotic or necrotic local lesions and systemic mottle or necrosis. This was followed, in several species, by production of small symptomless virus-containing leaves. The virus was cultured in N. clevelandii; Chenopodium quinoa was used for local-lesion assays. Leaf extracts from infected N. clevelandii were infective after dilution to 10–5 but usually not at 10–6, after heating for 10 min at 60°C but not at 65°C, and after storage at 20°C for at least 12 days. The virus has isometric particles of 26 nm diameter which sediment as three components, all containing a protein of mol. wt c. 53000. The two fastest sedimenting components respectively contain single-stranded RNA of mol. wt, estimated after glyoxylation, c. 2.9 × 106 and 2.3 × 106. Both RNA species are needed for infection of plants. In tests with antiserum prepared to purified virus particles, the virus was detected in cassava and N. clevelandii by gel-diffusion precipitin tests, by immunosorbent electron microscopy and by ELISA. Despite its similarity to nepoviruses, the virus did not react with antisera to 18 members of the group. It was named cassava green mottle virus and is considered to be a previously undescribed nepovirus.  相似文献   

3.
Garlic yellow streak virus, a potyvirus infecting garlic in New Zealand   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In New Zealand, all garlic (Allium sativum) plants tested were infected by a virus with flexuous filamentous particles 700–800 nm long. This virus, called garlic yellow streak virus (GYSV), infected only two of 12 species tested and was transmitted to garlic by the aphid Myzus persicae in a non-persistent manner. In garlic sap, GYSV was infective at a dilution of 10-4 but not 10-3, after heating for 10 min at 60°C but not 65°C, and after 2 days but not 3 days at 25°C. The yield of virus, purified from naturally infected garlic, was 3–4 mg/kg fresh leaf. Preparations had A260/A280= 1.28 and Aman/Amin= 1.08. The virus particles had a sedimentation coefficient of 149S and a buoyant density in CsCl of 1.334 g/cm3. Mol. wt estimates for the virus nucleic acid were 2.95 × 106 by electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gels and 3.46 × 106 from the sedimentation coefficient (41.4S) in linear-log sucrose density gradients. Two polypeptides were detected in virus preparations; one (mol. wt 30 500) was possibly a breakdown product of the other (mol. wt 33 000). GYSV was serologically distantly related to onion yellow dwarf and leek yellow stripe viruses but was considered to be a separate virus because it differed from them in host range.  相似文献   

4.
Tulip virus X (TVX), a previously undescribed mechanically transmissible virus, causes chlorotic and necrotic lesions in leaves and streaks of intensified pigmentation in tepals of tulip plants. The virus infected 22 of 42 other plant species in 10 of 14 families, but most host species were infected only erratically. TVX is best propagated in Chenopodium quinoa and assayed in C. amaranticolor. Spindleshaped inclusions were observed in epidermal cells of C. amaranticolor leaves. Leaf extracts from C. quinoa contained flexuous filamentous particles measuring c. 495 ×13 nm. The extracts were infective after dilution to 10-9, after heating for 10 min at 60 °C but not at 65 °C, and after storage at c. 20 °C for 30 days or at -20 °C for 6 months. TVX particles were purified (500 μg/g C. quinoa leaf) from tissue extracts in 0.067 M phosphate buffer containing 10 mM EDTA at pH 7, by twice precipitating the virus with 8% polyethylene glycol in 0.2 M NaCl followed by differential centrifugation. The virus particles have a sedimentation coefficient (s20, w) of 102 S. They contain a protein of mol. wt c. 22 500 and a nucleic acid that, when glyoxalated, migrates in agarose gel like single-stranded RNA of mol. wt 2.05 × 106. TVX particles tend to aggregate, and evidence was obtained that a 118 S component which was consistently observed in purified preparations and in infective sap is an end-to-end dimer. A distant serological relationship was found between particles of TVX and those of viola mottle and hydrangea ringspot viruses, but no serological relationship was detected to nine other potexviruses. TVX is considered to be a distinct and definitive member of the potexvirus group.  相似文献   

5.
Tephrosia symptomless virus (TSV), isolated from Tephrosia villosa, is widely distributed in coastal districts of Kenya. The virus was readily transmitted by inoculation of sap, but not by Aphis craccivora or Apion sp. (Curculionidae) or through soil. Host range was very restricted and it infected only 10 of 70 species tested in one of nine plant families; susceptible species were confined to five genera within the Papilionaceae. The virus was cultured, propagated and assayed in soybean. TSV remained infective after 10 min at 85°C, 3 wk at 20°C and 26 wk at -12°C; crude infective sap of Glycine max retained infectivity when diluted 10-6 but not 10-7. Virus was purified from systemically infected soybean by clarifying sap extracted in 0.06 m phosphate buffer containing 0.001 m EDTA and 0.1% thioglycollic acid (pH 7.5) with equal volumes of 1:1 n-butanol/chloroform followed by two cycles of differential and one of sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Purified preparations contained c. 33 nm isometric particles. TSV contained RNA and one protein of molecular weight 1.53. 106 and c. 42 000, respectively. Analytical centrifugation indicated a single component with a sedimentation coefficient (s.20, w) of 127 S; in Cs2SO4 and CsCl isopycnic gradients a single virus band formed; buoyant density in CsCl was 1.361. TSV was not related serologically to any of 44 viruses in nine plant virus groups but it resembled the tombusviruses and other ungrouped viruses such as carnation mottle in some of its properties.  相似文献   

6.
Wineberry latent virus (WLV) was obtained from a single symptomless plant of American wineberry (Rubus phoenicolasius) originally imported from the United States of America. On graft inoculation, WLV infected but induced no distinctive symptoms in several Rubus species including those used as indicators for known Rubus viruses. It was not seed-borne in wineberry. WLV was mechanically transmitted to several herbaceous species but induced local lesions in only a few; it was weakly systemic in some Chenopodium species. Infective C. quinoa sap lost infectivity after diluting to 10-4, heating for 10 min at 70°C, and storage either for 8 days at 18°C or for 32 days at 4°C. Sap from infected plants contained flexuous filamentous particles c. 510°12 nm. WLV was partially purified by extracting infected C. quinoa leaves in 0·05 M tris-HCl buffer (pH 7) containing 0·2% thio-glycerol and 10% (v/v) chloroform and concentrating virus by precipitation with 7% (w/v) polyethylene glycol (PEG, mol. wt 6000) and 0·1 NaCl. The virus was then pelleted through a 30% (w/v) sucrose pad containing 7% PEG+0·1 M NaCl and finally sedimented through a sucrose density-gradient. These preparations had A260/280 ratios of 1·26, contained end to end aggregates of WLV particles and formed a partly polydispersed peak in the analytical ultracentrifuge. WLV did not react with antisera to four potex-viruses, or to apple chlorotic leaf spot or apple stem grooving viruses.  相似文献   

7.
Carnation vein mottle virus (CarVMV) is rare in glasshouse carnations in Britain, although locally common in Dianthus barbatus in private gardens. In Sim carnations free from other viruses, CarVMV caused slight diffuse chlorotic mottling in the younger leaves, decreased flower yield by c. 22%, and caused flower breaking in cvs William Sim and Dusty. In non-Sim cultivars Pink Shibiuya, Orchid Beauty and Vesta, leaf symptoms and flower breaking were more pronounced. In mixed infections with carnation mottle virus, symptoms were much more severe. CarVMV was not eliminated from carnation or D. barbatus plants grown for 4 wk at 37oC, and only rarely from cuttings then taken from them, but it was readily eliminated by meristem-tip culture. Myzus persicae adults or nymphs acquired and transmitted the virus within a total time of 4 min, and remained infective for 30–60 min if feeding, or for 75 min if starved. The carnation aphid, M. persicae f. dianthi, transmitted the virus much less efficiently. The virus was not transmitted by dodder (Cuscuta campestris), or through seed of D. barbatus or Chenopodium quinoa. The maximum infective dilution in sap of D. barbatus, carnation and C. quinoa ranged from 10-2 to 10-5. The virus withstood 10 min at 60 but not 65oC, up to 9 days at c. 18oC or 3–4 wk at c. 2oC. CarVMV infected twenty-two of 107 plant species in six of thirty-seven families; suscepts were confined to the Chenopodiaceae, Caryophyllaceae and closely allied families. C. quinoa was the best local lesion assay host. Seedling clones of D. barbatus, selected as resistant to carnation mottle virus, proved the best indicator and propagation species. Up to 50 mg virus/kg tissue were obtained by butanol clarification followed by differential and density gradient centrifugation. The preparations contained a single sedimenting component, s20w= 144S, and had flexuous filamentous particles, c. 790 times 12 run; the particles contained a single polypeptide, mol. wt 34800, and 5% of a single-stranded ribonucleic acid (RNA) with nucleotide base ratios of G21: A25: C25: U29. Serologically CarVMV was related distantly to turnip mosaic (cabbage black ring strain), pea mosaic, watermelon mosaic (Strain 2) and bean yellow mosaic viruses, more closely to pepper veinal mottle virus, but unrelated to twelve other potyviruses. CarVMV is not at present a danger to carnation crops in Britain, but the recent trend of sending carnation plants to overwinter outdoors in warmer countries involves potential risks of more rapid spread by effective vector races of M. persicae.  相似文献   

8.
A virus, now named peanut green mosaic virus (PGMV), was isolated from groundnut (Arachis hypogaea) in India and identified as a member of the potato virus Y group by electron microscopy, aphid transmission, and its chemical properties. It was sap transmissible to 16 species of the Leguminosae, Solanaceae, Chenopodiaceae, Aizoaceae and Pedaliaceae; Phaseolus vulgaris was a good local lesion host. PGMV remained infective in buffered groundnut leaf sap at dilutions of 10-3 after 3 to 4 days at 25 °C, or heating for 10 min to 55 °C but not 60 °C. PGMV was transmitted in the non-persistent manner by Aphis gossypii and Myzus persicae but was not seed-borne. Purified virus preparations contained flexuous filamentous particles c. 750 nm long which sedimented as a single component with a sedimentation coefficient (S°20w) of 171S, and contained a single polypeptide (mol. wt 34 500 daltons) and one nucleic acid species (mol. wt 3.25 × 106 daltons). PGMV is serologically unrelated to peanut mottle virus (PMV) and other viruses infecting leguminous crops. Infected leaves contained cylindrical, cytoplasmic inclusions.  相似文献   

9.
A virus with spherical particles c. 28 nm in diameter was sap-transmitted from different cassava (Manihot esculenta) cultivars to a limited range of species in the families Chenopodiaceae and Solanaceae. Cassava seedlings infected by inoculation with sap or with purified virus preparations did not show any symptom, although the virus was readily detected by ELISA or by further inoculations. Leaf extracts from infected Nicotiana benthamiana were infective after dilution of 10--3but not 10--4, and after heating for 10 min at 70°C, but not at 72°C. The virus was purified from N. benthamiana, N. clevelandii or from cassava. On sucrose gradients, the virus particles sediment as three components all containing a protein of mol. wt c. 57000. The genome of the virus is composed of two RNAs of mol. wt c. 2.54 times 106(RNA-1) and 1.44 times 106(RNA-2). RNA-2 was detected in the middle and the bottom nucleoprotein components, and RNA-1 only in the bottom component. An antiserum prepared to purified virus particles was used to readily detect the virus in cassava and other host plants by ELISA and by ISEM. No serological relationship was shown between this virus and eight nepoviruses, including the recently described cassava green mottle nepovirus infecting cassava in the Solomon Islands (Lennon, Aiton & Harrison, 1987). The virus described here is the first nepovirus isolated from cassava in South America, and is named cassava American latent virus.  相似文献   

10.
Crimson clover latent virus (CCLV) was detected in five seed lots of crimson clover (Trifolium incarnatum) from Europe and in one from the United States of America. Ninety-seven per cent of all crimson clover plants examined were found to be infected but were without symptoms. Keeping crimson clover plants at 32–38°C for 34 days failed to free them from CCLV. The virus was not transmitted by Myzus persicae, but was transmitted by inoculation of sap to Chenopodium album, C. amaranticolor and C. quinoa. Twenty-four other plant species from seven families were not infected. CCLV was best propagated in C. quinoa in which it caused stunting and systemic chlorosis. Sap from infected C. quinoa was infective after dilution to 10-2 but not 10-3, after 10 min at 60°C but not 65°C, and after 20 days at 20°C. In neutral phosphotungstate, CCLV had isometric particles c. 26 nm in diameter with a hexagonal profile. About 20 to 80 A1cm,260 units of purified virus were obtained from 1 kg of infected C. quinoa or C. amaranticolor leaves by extraction in 0.5 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.5, containing 0.01 M ethylene diamine tetra-acetate and 0.4% 2–mercaptoethanol and clarification with chloroform-butanol followed by two precipitations with polyethylene glycol (mol. wt 6000) and several cycles of differential centrifugation. Purified virus sedimented as three components with sedimentation coefficients (s°20, w) of 52S, 101S and 122S. The 101S and 122S components had buoyant densities in CsCl of 1.438 and 1.495 g/cm3 respectively. From these values the nucleic acid content of the 101S and 122S components was estimated to be 32–35% and 40–41% respectively. The virus contained a single protein with an estimated mol. wt of 52 000 and two single-stranded RNA species of estimated mol. wt 1.6 × 106 and 2.2 × 106. CCLV was serologically unrelated to 31 other morphologically similar viruses. Although its vector is unknown, CCLV seems to have affinities with nepoviruses. The cryptogram of CCLV is R/1:2.2/40–41 + 1.6132–35:S/S:S/*.  相似文献   

11.
A new virus, peanut stripe (PStV), isolated from groundnut (Arachis hypogaea) in the USA, induced characteristic striping, discontinuous vein banding along the lateral veins, and oakleaf mosaic in groundnut. The virus was also isolated from germplasm lines introduced from the People's Republic of China. PStV was transmitted by inoculation of sap to nine species of the Chenopodiaceae, Leguminosae, and Solanaceae; Chenopodium amaranticolor was a good local lesion host. PStV was also transmitted by Aphis craccivora in a non-persistent manner and through seed of groundnut up to 37%. The virus remained infective in buffered plant extracts after diluting to 10-3, storage for 3 days at 20°C, and heating for 10 min at 60°C but not 65°C. Purified virus preparations contained flexuous filamentous particles c. 752 nm long, which contained a major polypeptide of 33 500 daltons and one nucleic acid species of 3·1 × 106 daltons. In ELISA, PStV was serologically related to blackeye cowpea mosaic, soybean mosaic, clover yellow vein, and pepper veinal mottle viruses but not to peanut mottle, potato Y, tobacco etch, and peanut green mosaic viruses. On the basis of these properties PStV is identified as a new potyvirus in groundnut.  相似文献   

12.
Cowpea mild mottle virus (CMMV), a previously undescribed virus widespread in cowpeas (Vigna unguiculata) in the Eastern Region of Ghana, was seed-borne in V. unguiculata, Phaseolus vulgaris and Glycine max, but was not transmitted by twelve aphid species including Aphis craccivora, A. fabae, Acyrthosiphon pisum and Myzus persicae. CMMV was transmitted by inoculation of sap to eleven of seventeen members of the Papilionaceae causing very severe diseases in G. max and Arachis hypogaea, and to ten of fifty-one species within five of nineteen other families; it was best propagated in G. max and Nicotiana clevelandii, and assayed in Chenopodium quinoa. Sap from systemically infected G. max was infective after dilution to 10-3 but not 10-4, after 10 min at 65 °C but not at 70 °C, or after 4 days at 18 °C or 16 days at 2 °C. Lyophilized sap was infective after 3 years in vacuo. CMMV has straight to slightly flexuous, fragile filamentous particles, c. 13 × 650 nm which, in sap, are occasionally surrounded by a loose external spiral. About 5 mg of purified virus was obtained from 1 kg of leaf tissue of G. max or N. clevelandii by clarifying leaf extracts in 0.02 m borate buffer (pH 9.5) with chloroform, followed by two or three cycles of differential centrifugation, and density gradient centrifugation. Virus preparations had ultraviolet absorption spectra typical of a nucleoprotein containing c. 5 % nucleic acid, contained numerous particles without external spirals, which sedimented as a single component with a sedimentation coefficient (s°20, w) of 165 × 4S, and contained a single polypeptide species with a molecular weight of 32000–33000. CMMV showed a distant serological relationship to carnation latent virus, but not to ten other morphologically similar viruses; it thus seems to be a distinct member of the carlavirus group, and has the cryptogram: */*:*/(5):E/E:S/*.  相似文献   

13.
A mechanically transmissible virus obtained from symptomless plants of a red raspberry selection imported into Scotland from Quebec, Canada was indistinguishable serologically from a cherry isolate of cherry rasp leaf virus (CRLV). The raspberry isolate, CRLV-R, was graft transmitted to several virus indicator species and cultivars of Rubus without inducing noticeable symptoms. In Chenopodium quinoa sap, CRLV-R lost infectivity after dilution to 10-5 or heating for 10 min at 60°C but was infective after 16 days (the longest period tested) at 18°, 4° or - 15°C. The virus particles are isometric, c. 28 nm in diameter, and were purified with difficulty from infected C. murale and C. quinoa plants. The particles comprise two nucleoprotein components with sedimentation coefficients of 89 and 115 S and are prone to aggregate during purification. When centrifuged to equilibrium in CS2SO4 solution, purified virus preparations formed two major components with p= 1·28 and 1·36 g/cm3. Virus particles contained two RNA species which, when denatured in glyoxal and electrophoresed in agarose gels, had estimated mol. wt of 2·56 × 106 (RNA-1) and 1·26 × 106 (RNA–2). Infectivity of CRLV-R RNA was abolished by treatment with proteinase K, suggesting that the RNA is linked to protein necessary for infectivity; RNA molecules contained polyadenylate. In reticulocyte lysates, CRLV-R RNA stimulated the incorporation of 3H-leucine, mainly into two polypeptides of estimated mol. wt 200 000 and 102 000. When electrophoresed in polyacrylamide gels, protein obtained from CRLV-R particles purified by centrifugation to equilibrium in Cs2SO4 separated into three bands with estimated mol. wt 26 000 , 23 000 and 21 000.  相似文献   

14.
Two strains of a virus, designated cymbidium ringspot virus (CyRSV), were isolated from cymbidium orchids and from Trifolium repens respectively in Britain. Experimentally infected cymbidiums developed slight chlorotic ring-mottle; T. repens developed flecks and mottling in the leaves, and slight stunting. Of 101 plant species tested, the cymbidium strain infected sixty-one (thirteen systemically) in twenty-three of thirty-five families; the clover strain infected sixty-four species (eighteen systemically) in twenty-two families. Both strains were propagated in Nicotiana clevelandii and assayed in Chenopodium quinoa. CyRSV was readily transmitted by inoculation of sap, and by foliage contact between plants, but not by the aphids Myzus persicae or Acyrtho-siphon pisum, nor through seed of T. incarnatum, Phaseolus vulgaris or N. clevelandii. Highly infective virus was released into soil from roots of infected N. clevelandii, and acquired by bait seedlings planted in such soil. Similar transmission occurred when purified virus was applied to the surface of sterilized soil containing bait plants; there was no evidence for any living soil vector. The virus was eliminated from 96 % of small cuttings taken from infected N. clevelandii plants grown at 35–37 °C for 9 wk. CyRSV was still infective in sap of N. clevelandii after dilution to 10?5-io–6 (only 2 × 10_1 in cymbidium sap), or after 10min at 85–90 °C. It survived at least 10 months at c. 20 °C and more than 12 yr at 2 °C. Lyophilized sap was highly infective after over 13 yr at laboratory temperatures under high vacuum. Purified preparations made by clarification with n-butanol, followed by differential centrifugation and exclusion chromatography on controlled-pore glass beads, contained isometric particles c. 30 nm diam., with s°20W= 137 S, and had a buoyant density in caesium chloride of 1–36 g/ml. The A 260/A 280 ratio was 1–55, and A max(26o)/A min(242) was 1–17. The virus contained c. 15 % of single-stranded RNA of mol. wt 1–7 × 106; the nucleotide base ratios were: G27'8; A24/9; C2I-3; U26-I. There was one capsid polypeptide of mol. wt 43600. The virus was a good immunogen and a strongly reacting antigen in vitro; in Immunoelectrophoresis, each strain migrated as a single antigenic component towards the cathode. The cymbidium and clover strains were serologically closely related, although spurs were produced in immunodiffusion. No serological relationship was found to forty-three other isometric viruses, including eighteen tombusvirus isolates; CyRSV nevertheless shares many properties with tombusviruses, and we assign it provisionally to this group. The cryptogram is: R/r:1:7/15:S/S:S/O.  相似文献   

15.
A virus found in cassava from the north-west of the Ivory Coast was transmitted by inoculation with sap extracts to herbaceous species in six plant families. Chenopodium quinoa was used as a propagation host and C. murale was used for local lesion assays. The virus particles are bacilliform, c. 18 nm in diameter, with predominant lengths of 42,49 and 76 nm and a structure apparently similar to that found in alfalfa mosaic virus. Purified preparations of virus particles had A260/A280 of 1.7 ±0.05, contained one protein of Mrc. 22 000, and yielded three species of RNA with Mr (× 10-6) of c. 0.7, 0.8 and 1.2. Although the virus particles were poorly immunogenic, an antiserum was produced and the virus was detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (DAS-ELISA) in leaf extracts at concentrations down to c. 6 ng/ml. Four other field isolates were also detected, including a strain which caused only mild systemic symptoms in C. quinoa instead of necrosis. The naturally infected cassava source plants were also infected with African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV) but when the new virus was cultured in Nicotiana benthamiana, either separately or together with ACMV, its concentration was the same. The new virus did not react with antisera to several plant viruses with small bacilliform or quasi-bacilliform particles, and alfalfa mosaic virus reacted only weakly and inconsistently with antiserum to the cassava virus. The new virus, for which the name cassava Ivorian bacilliform virus is proposed, is tentatively classified as the second member of the alfalfa mosaic virus group.  相似文献   

16.
A distinctive strain of tobacco necrosis virus (TNV) of unknown source was repeatedly isolated from water of the River Avon (Warwickshire) and two of its tributaries (R. Swift and R. Alne) using a technique developed for the concentration and isolation of water-borne bacteriophages. The same strain was isolated from the rivers Cam and Thames and from Lake Esthwaite (Cumbria) together with tomato bushy stunt virus. The TNV strain, designated Chenopodium necrosis (TNV-CN) was mechanically transmissible to C. amaranticolor and C. quinoa in both of which it caused local lesions and systemic infection. TNV-CN caused no infection when inoculated to tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv. White Burley) plants. The virus was not adsorbed to soil, could be isolated from leachate of soil in which systemically infected C. quinoa were grown and C. quinoa plants became infected when grown in soil watered with suspensions of the virus. The virus was not transmitted by Myzus persicae but was vectored by the zoospores of a lettuce isolate of Olpidium brassicae. TNV-CN was infective after 10 min at 85 °C., 3 wk at 20 °C and when diluted to 10-8 but not 10-9. Purified virus preparations contained c. 26 nm isometric virus particles. TNV-CN contained single-stranded RNA (mol. wt 1·5 × 106) and one protein (mol. wt c. 26·4 × 103) which co-electrophoresed in polyacrylamide gels with the protein of the D strain of TNV (TNV-D). Analytical centrifugation of TNV-CN indicated a single component virus with the same sedimentation coefficient (s20, w= 115S) and buoyant density (1·385) in a CsCl gradient as those of TNV-D. TNV-CN and TNV-D were indistinguishable serologically.  相似文献   

17.
A virus causing ‘eyespot’ leaf symptoms in groundnut plants was transmitted by sap-inoculation and by Aphis craccivora in the non-persistent manner. It infected 16 of 72 species from five of 12 families and was easily propagated in Arachis hypogaea and Physalis floridana. The virus has particles c. 13 × 755 nm and is serologically closely related to soybean mosaic and pepper veinal mottle viruses, and more distantly to four other potyviruses. The virus differs in host range, in vitro properties and serological properties from previously described strains of soybean mosaic and pepper veinal mottle viruses. It seems to be a distinct member of the potyvirus group and we propose the name groundnut eyespot virus.  相似文献   

18.
Properties of a resistance-breaking strain of potato virus X   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
During indexing of a potato germplasm collection from Bolivia, a strain of potato virus X (PVX), XHB, which failed to cause local lesions in inoculated leaves of Gomphrena globosa was found in 7% of the clones. XHB was transmitted by inoculation of sap to 56 species from 11 families out of 64 species from 12 families tested. It was best propagated in Nicotiana glutinosa or N. debneyi; Montia perfolia and Petunia hybrida were useful as local lesion hosts. Inoculated leaves of G. globosa plants kept at 10°, 14°, 18°, 22°, or 26 °C after inoculation were always infected symptomlessly. XHB caused a mild mosaic, systemic chlorotic blotching or symptomless infection in 16 wild potato species and eight Andean potato cultivars, systemic necrotic symptoms in clone A6 and cultivar Mi Peru, and bright yellow leaf markings in cultivar Renacimiento. It caused necrotic local lesions in inoculated leaves of British potato cultivars with the PVX hypersensitivity gene Nb but then invaded the plants systemically without causing further necrosis; with gene Nx systemic invasion occurred but no necrotic symptoms developed. These reactions resemble those of PVX strain group four. XHB differed from other known strains of PVX in readily infecting PVX-immune clones 44/1016/10, G. 4298.69 and USDA 41956, cultivars Saphir and Saco, and Solanum acaule PI 230554. XHB had slightly flexuous filamentous particles with a normal length of 516 nm. It was transmitted readily by plant contact and it partially protected G. globosa leaves from infection with XCP, a group two strain of PVX. Sap from infected N. glutinosa was infective after dilution to 10--6 but not 10--7 after 10 min at 75° but not 80 °C and after 1 yr at 20 °C. XHB was readily purified from infected N. debneyi leaves by precipitation with polyethylene glycol followed by differential centrifugation. Microprecipitin tests showed that XHB and XCP are closely related serologically.  相似文献   

19.
Tulip chlorotic blotch virus (TCBV), an apparently undescribed potyvirus found in field grown tulips in Australia, causes symptoms in tulip leaves and flowers identical to those induced by tulip breaking virus (TBV). TCBV was transmitted mechanically to 14 of 34 species in four of 13 families. Nicotiana clevelandii is a suitable propagation host and Chenopodium amaranticolor a local-lesion assay host. TCBV was transmitted from tulip to tulip and TV. clevelandii by the aphid Myzus persicae. Unlike TBV it was not transmitted to Lilium formosanum either by M. persicae or by manual inoculation. Leaf extracts from TCBV-containing TV. clevelandii were infective after dilution to l0-3 but not 10-4 and after heating for 10 min at 50°C but not 60°C; infectivity and particle recovery were adversely affected by freezing at -20°C. TCBV particles were purified (c. 1 mg/100g g N. clevelandii leaf) from tissue extracts in 0·3 M citrate buffer containing 10 mM EDTA and 0·2% (v/v) 2-mercaptoethanol at pH 7·4 by clarification with 8·5% (v/v) n-butanol followed by differential centrifugation and sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Purified particles measured c. 720 × 12 nm. Virus particle antigen was readily detected in leaf and tepal extracts of tulip by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. A distant serological relationship was found between particles of TCBV and those of bean yellow mosaic virus but no serological relationship was found to TBV or four other potyviruses.  相似文献   

20.
The concentration of potato leafroll luteovirus (PLRV) (c. 1300 ng/g leaf) in singly infected Nicotiana clevelandii plants was increased up to 10-fold in plants co-infected with each of several potyviruses, or with narcissus mosaic potexvirus, carrot mottle virus or each of three tobravirus isolates. With the tobraviruses, PLRV concentration was increased equally by co-infection with either NM-type isolates (coat protein-free cultures containing RNA-1) or M-type isolates (particle-producing cultures containing RNA-1 and RNA-2). In contrast, the accumulation of PLRV was not substantially affected by co-infection with either of two nepoviruses, cucumber mosaic cucumovirus, broad bean mottle bromovirus, alfalfa mosaic virus, pea enation mosaic virus or parsnip yellow fleck virus. The specificity of these interactions between PLRV and sap-transmissible viruses was retained in tests made in Nicotiana benthamiana and when beet western yellows luteovirus was used instead of PLRV.  相似文献   

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