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1.
The Indian cassava mosaic virus (ICMV) was transmitted by the whitefly Bemisia tabaci and sap inoculation. ICMV was purified from cassava and from systemically infected Nicotiana benthamiana leaves. Geminate particles of 16–18 × 30 nm in size were observed by electron microscopy. The particles contained a single major protein of an estimated molecular weight of 34,000. Specific antiserum trapped geminate particles from the extracts of infected cassava and N. benthamiana plants in ISEM test. The virus was detected in crude extracts of infected cassava, ceara rubber, TV. benthamiana and N. tabacum cv. Jayasri plants by ELISA. ICMV appeared serologically related to the gemini viruses of Acalypha yellow mosaic, bhendi yellow vein mosaic, Croton yellow vein mosaic, Dolichos yellow mosaic, horsegram yellow mosaic, Malvastrum yellow vein mosaic and tobacco leaf curl.  相似文献   

2.
DNA probes, made by cloning double-stranded forms of each of the genome parts (DNA-1 and DNA-2) of the Kenyan type isolate of African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV-T), reacted strongly with extracts from Nicotiana benthamiana plants infected with ACMV-T, or with Angolan or Nigerian isolates that are closely serologically related to the type isolate. However, only the DNA-1 probes reacted with extracts of TV. benthamiana infected with a Kenyan coast isolate (ACMV-C), which is serologically less closely related to ACMV-T. DNA-1 and DNA-2 probes also reacted with extracts of mosaic-affected Angolan cassava plants, including some which have not yielded ACMV particles detectable by immunosorbent electron microscopy and from which virus isolates have not been transmitted to TV. benthamiana. These anomalous plants, unlike other naturally infected cassava plants, showed mosaic symptoms on all their leaves which, however, contained only traces of virus particle antigen detectable by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. They contain isolates of ACMV that are probably defective for particle production. ACMV-T particles accumulated optimally in N. benthamiana at 20–25°C. At 30°C fewer particles, which apparently had a slightly greater specific infectivity, were produced. At 15°C, considerable quantities of virus particle antigen, virus DNA and virus particles were produced but the particles were poorly infective, and the few that could be purified contained an abnormally large proportion of polydisperse linear DNA molecules, and fewer circular molecules than usual. Angolan isolates, whether particle-producing or not, likewise replicated better in cassava plants at 23 °C than at 30 °C. In contrast, ACMV-C attained only very low concentrations in N. benthamiana, but these were greater at 30 °C than at 23°C.  相似文献   

3.
Cassava mosaic disease (CMD) exists throughout Africa, and cassava latent virus (CLV) has been implicated as the etiological agent in Kenya and West Africa. However, in Southern Africa, the causal agent of CMD was not until recently associated with CLV, and the possibility of a second flexuous virus particle has not been ignored. Attempts to isolate and visualize CLV antigen have been successful with Nicotiana benthamiana, an indicator host plant of CLV, but all efforts to isolate and visualize particles in infected cassava plants have failed. Immunocytochemical studies were undertaken in an attempt to localize virus antigen in infected cassava tissue.Cytochemical staining (light microscope) of infected cassava leaf material revealed the presence of inclusion bodies in epidermal and palaside mesophyll cells, and in epidermal collenchyma and outer parenchyma cells from the petiole and stem. However, transmission electron-microscopical (TEM) investigations revealed electron dense bodies in the cytoplasm, and no characteristic CLV nuclear inclusion bodies were evident. Transmission experiments to N. benthamiana and N. tabacum were attempted and leaves, exhibiting symptoms, examined microscopically. The nuclei appeared swollen (in comparison to uninfected leaves), a characteristic of CLV- infected N. benthamiana. However at the TEM level, no characteristic fibrillar-ring inclusion bodies or particles, could be visualized.Further immunocytochemical investigations were initiated, employing antisera raised against CLV isolated from N. benthamiana, and antisera for cassava common mosaic virus (CCMV), cassava brown streak virus (CBSV) and cassava X virus (CsXV). Goat anti-rabbit IgG-gold was used as a direct stain. No labelling occurred with CCMV and CBSV antisera. Intense gold labelling was located in the cytoplasm of phloem, mesophyll and epidermal cells of infected cassava and to a lesser extent in N. tabacum and N. benthamiana using affinity chromatography purified CLV antiserum. Little labelling was observed in nuclei of infected cells. Inconclusive results were obtained with CsXV antiserum.Immunogold labelling located CLV viral antigens in infected cassava leaf tissue. This observation, together with positive ELISA, transmission and DNA hybridization experiments, proves conclusively that CLV viral antigen is present in infected cassava in Southern Africa. However, most viral antigen in infected cassava, unlike N. benthamiana (fibrillar and granular nuclear inclusions) appears to be in the cytoplasm. This may tentatively suggest that the CLV protein is synthesized in the cytoplasm of its natural host, cassava, even though the virus may assemble in the nucleus at the appropriate time. However, as yet no virus inclusions have been observed in nuclei of infected cassava. Due to previous isolation of a flexuous rod and ambiguous staining results, the possibility of two viruses in cassava cannot be ruled out.  相似文献   

4.
Cassava latent virus (CLV) is almost entirely confined in East Africa to upland cassava-growing areas west of the Rift Valley, where it is often associated with cassava mosaic disease (it was isolated from 27 of 38 cassava plants with mosaic, but not from 24 without mosaic). However, it is not the causal agent, because it was not recovered from any of 31 mosaic-diseased plants in coastal districts. All attempts to return CLV to cassava failed. The host range of CLV appears to be limited to Euphorbiaceae (Manihot) and Solanaceae (Nicotiana, Datura, Nicandra, Solanum). N. clevelandii proved the most useful assay and propagation host. The dilution end-point of CLV was about 10-3, thermal inactivation point about 55°C, and longevity in vitro about 3 days. CLV was purified by clarification of leaf extracts with butanol/chloroform mixtures. Purified preparations (A 260/A 280 ratio c. 16) contained numerous 30 20 nm paired particles with a sedimentation coefficient (s20w) of 76 S. Treatment with RNase and DNase showed that the viral nucleic acid is DNA; CLV closely resembles maize streak virus but is not related to it serologically. The cryptogram for CLV is D/1: 0.8/*: S/S: S/*, geminivirus group.  相似文献   

5.
Horsegram yellow mosaic disease was shown to be caused by a geminivirus; horsegram yellow mosaic virus (HYMV). The virus could not be transmitted by mechanical sap inoculation. Leaf dip and purified virus preparations showed geminate virus particles, measuring 15-18 * 30 nm. An antiserum for HYMV was produced and in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and immunosorbent electron microscopy (ISEM) tests HYMV was detected in leaf extracts of fieldinfected bambara groundnut, french bean, groundnut, limabean, mungbean, pigeonpea and soybean showing yellow mosaic symptoms. Bemisia tabaci fed on purified HYMV through a parafilm membrane transmitted the virus to all the hosts listed above but not to Ageratum conyzoides, okra, cassava, cowpea, Croton bonplandianus, Lab-lab purpureus, Malvastrum coromandalianum and tomato. No reaction was obtained in ELISA and ISEM tests between HYMV antibodies and extracts of plants diseased by whitefly-transmitted agents in India such as A. conyzoides yellow mosaic, okra yellow vein mosaic, C. bonplandianus, yellow vein mosaic, M. coromandalianum yellow vein mosaic, tomato leaf curl and cassava mosaic. HYMV was also not found to be related serologically to bean golden mosaic, virus.  相似文献   

6.
A strain of cassava latent virus occurring in coastal districts of Kenya   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A strain of cassava latent geminivirus (CLV) was isolated from mosaic-affected cassava plants from coastal districts of Kenya. This virus (CLV-C) did not infect Nicotiana clevelandii, a diagnostic host of the type strain (CLV-T); experimental host range was very restricted and CLV-C only infected N. benthamiana and N. rustica out of several solanaceous hosts readily infected by CLV-T. CLV-C was also isolated from naturally infected Jatropha multifida (Euphorbiaceae) and Hewittia sublobata (Convolvulaceae). CLV-C was propagated in N. benthamiana with difficulty and only those isolates derived from cassava plants infected with severe mosaic symptoms were maintained more or less successfully; these sources usually contained a higher concentration of CLV than plants with mild symptoms. Symptom variants generally remained unchanged when grafted into a highly susceptible South American cassava variety. CLV-C and CLV-T seemed to occur respectively only in coastal and western districts but their ranges overlapped in central Kenya where they could have been introduced in infected material. CLV-C could be purified satisfactorily with the method used for CLV-T but only after modifying the procedure by substituting phosphate for borate in the extraction buffer, n-butanol for n-butanol/chloroform in clarification of extracts, and phosphate for borate buffer when resuspending concentrated virus. A virus serologically indistinguishable from CLV-T was isolated from mosaic- affected material obtained from Nigeria; East African and Nigerian isolates were essentially similar in host range and symptomatology. In gel-diffusion serology tests, pronounced precipitation spurs developed between CLV-T and CLV-C indicating that the isolates were related but not identical serologically. Symptoms typical of cassava mosaic disease appeared in only three of 105 plants in experiments on transmission of CLV-C and CLV-T by whiteflies, when attempted acquisition of either clarified CLV-infective sap or purified CLV was made through ‘Parafilm’ membranes. Because it is possible that the three infections resulted from contamination, they cannot constitute proof of transmission. The presence of CLV in relation to the etiology of cassava mosaic thus remains unresolved.  相似文献   

7.
Virus content of leaves of cassava infected by African cassava mosaic virus   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV) was detected in cassava leaves by ELISA. Some normal constituents of cassava leaves interfered with virus detection but leaf extracts of Nicotiana benthamiana did not. The symptom pattern was determined early in the growth of a leaf and subsequently changed little. ACMV was found only in the yellow or yellow green areas of the mosaic pattern. Virus content of the leaves increased with increasing symptom intensity, but decreased with leaf age and ACMV was not detected in mature leaves. Most whiteflies were found on young growing cassava leaves and the number decreased progressively with leaf age. This distribution will aid both the acquisition and inoculation of the virus.  相似文献   

8.
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   

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.
An antiserum against polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid (In-Cn) was used to detect double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) by indirect ELISA (ELISA-I). DsRNA from cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) and plum pox virus (PPV)-infected plants was detected using different types of extracts. The pH of the extraction buffer was very important in dsRNA detection, the highest optical density values being obtained at pH 6 or in aqueous extracts. Extracts heated at 80°C for 2 min showed increased optical density values compared with unheated extracts. DsRNA from Nicotiana benthamiana plants infected with each of six PPV isolates was readily detected by ELISA-I 50 days after inoculation. ELISA values then obtained with the In-Cn antiserum were generally higher than those obtained by double antibody sandwich ELISA using an antiserum to virus coat protein. Purified dsRNA from the same infected plants showed no visible band, but it produced a fluorescent background when analysed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
African Cassava Mosaic Virus (ACMV) was purified by a method which allowed the separation of monomer from dimcr virus particles. Optimal conditions for storing purified virus to be used for immunization were determined by ELISA and inoculation on Nicotiana benthamiana. Purified virus could be stored without loss of infectivity and serological activity for more than 145 days at 4 °C or frozen at –20 °C, but not longer than 40 days in the presence of 50 % redistilled glycerol. Rabbit and chicken immunoglobulins were used to detect ACMV in cassava leaves by direct and indirect ELISA. To obtain the same absorbance values, it was necessary to use longer incubation times with the indirect method, but the virus detection end-point m sap from infected plants was the same for the two methods (1/512). Conditions for improving virus detection tn cassava samples were determined. The virus was better detected when leaves from diseased plants were ground in 100 mM Tris-HCl containing 1 % polyvinylpyrrolidone at pH 8.5 than in phosphate buffer. Plant inhibitors were the restricting factor in the detection of virus by ELISA, but this difficulty was avoided when leaves to be tested were harvested from the top of the cassava plants.  相似文献   

13.
Selected monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), prepared to particles of African cassava mosaic or Indian cassava mosaic geminiviruses, detected three geminiviruses that occur in Europe: abutilon mosaic virus in Abutilon pictum ‘Thompsonii’, tobacco leaf curl virus in Lonicera japonica var. aureo-reticulata and tomato yellow leaf curl virus in Lycopersicon esculentum. All three viruses were detected in indirect ELISA by MAbs SCR 17 and SCR 20 but they were differentiated by their reactions with SCR 18 and SCR 23. Tobacco leaf curl virus was detected only when reducing agents were included in the leaf extraction medium. Inclusion of sodium sulphite slightly improved detection of tomato yellow leaf curl virus but reducing agents were not needed for detection of abutilon mosaic virus.  相似文献   

14.
Particles resembling those of geminiviruses were found by immunosorbent electron microscopy in extracts of plants infected in India with bhendi yellow vein mosaic, croton yellow vein mosaic, dolichos yellow mosaic, horsegram yellow mosaic, Indian cassava mosaic and tomato leaf curl viruses. All these viruses were transmitted by Bemisia tabaci whiteflies, all reacted with at least one out of ten monoclonal antibodies to African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV), and all reacted with a probe for ACMV DNA-1, but scarcely or not at all with a full-length probe for ACMV DNA-2. Most of the viruses were distinguished by their host ranges when transmitted by whiteflies, and the rest could be distinguished by their pattern of reactions with the panel of monoclonal antibodies. Horsegram yellow mosaic virus was distinguished from Thailand mung bean yellow mosaic virus by its lack of sap transmissibility, ability to infect Arachis hypogaea, failure to react strongly with the probe for ACMV DNA-2 and its pattern of reactions with the monoclonal antibodies. Structures resembling a ‘string of pearls’, but not geminate particles, were found in leaf extracts containing malvastrum yellow vein mosaic virus. Such extracts reacted with two of the monoclonal antibodies, suggesting that this whitefly-transmitted virus too is a geminivirus. All seven viruses from India can therefore be considered whitefly-transmitted geminiviruses.  相似文献   

15.
Large quantities of cassava common mosaic virus (CCMV) were purified from systemically infected Nicotiana benthamiana plants. A polyclonal antiserum, with a titre of 1/128 in the tube precipitin test, was produced by immunising rabbits with purified virus. Viral antigens were detected in cassava, using both the double-antibody sandwich or plate-trapped antigen forms of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The virus reacted with antisera to the potexviruses potato virus X and tulip virus X in F(ab')2 ELISA. As determined by ELISA, isolates of CCMV from cassava and chaya are closely serologically related to each other. Leaf extracts from infected N. benthamiana plants were infective to a dilution of 10--4 but not 10--5; after heating for 10 min at 65 °C but not 70 °C; and after storage at room temperature for 14 days. The virus has a sedimentation coefficient of 126 S20,w, a single coat protein molecule of c . mol. wt 21 000, and a single-stranded RNA genome of c . mol. wt 2.0 ± 106. Several dsRNA species, including the putative viral replicative form of c . mol. wt 4.1 ± 106, were isolated from virus-infected cassava and N. benthamiana .  相似文献   

16.
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was adapted for the efficient detection and assay of potato leafroll virus (PLRV) in aphids. Best results were obtained when aphids were extracted in 0.05 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, and the extracts incubated at 37 °C for 1 h before starting the assay. Using batches of 20 green peach aphids (Myzus persicae), about 0.01 ng PLRV/aphid could be detected. The virus could also be detected in single aphids allowed a 1-day acquisition access period on infected potato leaves. The PLRV content of aphids depended on the age of potato source-plants and the position of source leaves on them. It increased with increase in acquisition access period up to 7 days but differed considerably between individual aphids. A maximum of 7 ng PLRV/aphid was recorded but aphids more usually accumulated about 0.2 ng PLRV per day. When aphids were allowed acquisition access periods of 1–3 days, and then caged singly on Physalis floridana seedlings for 3 days, the PLRV content of each aphid, measured subsequently, was not strongly correlated with the infection of P. floridana. The concentration of PLRV in leaf extracts differed only slightly when potato plants were kept at 15, 20, 25 or 30 °C for 1 or 2 wk, but the virus content of aphids kept on leaves at the different temperatures decreased with increase of temperature. PLRV was transmitted readily to P. floridana at all temperatures, but by a slightly smaller proportion of aphids, and after a longer latent period, at 15 °C than at 30 °C. The PLRV content of M. persicae fed on infected potato leaves decreased with increasing time after transfer to turnip (immune to PLRV). The decrease occurred in two phases, the first rapid and the second very slow. In the first phase the decrease was faster, briefer and greater at 25 and 30 °C than at 15 and 20 °C. No evidence was obtained that PLRV multiplies in M. persicae. These results are compatible with a model in which much of the PLRV in aphids during the second phase is in the haemocoele, and transmission is mainly limited by the rate of passage of virus particles from haemolymph to saliva. The potato aphid, Macrosiphum euphorbiae, transmitted PLRV much less efficiently than M. persicae. Its inefficiency as a vector could not be ascribed to failure to acquire or retain PLRV, or to the degradation of virus particles in the aphid. Probably only few PLRV particles pass from the haemolymph to saliva in this species. The virus content of M. euphorbiae collected from PLRV-infected potato plants in the field increased from early June to early July, and then decreased. PLRV was detected both in spring migrants collected from the plants and in summer migrants caught in yellow water-traps. PLRV was also detected in M. persicae collected from infected plants in July and August, and in trapped summer migrants, but their PLRV content was less than that of M. euphorbiae, and in some instances was too small for unequivocal detection.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
A severe foliar yellow mosaic disease was observed in horse chestnut trees (Aesculus carnea and A. hippocastanum). Reactions in woody indicator plants grafted with diseased horse chestnut suggested the presence of an ilarvirus. Virus isolates obtained by mechanical inoculation of herbaceous test plants reacted with antisera to apple mosaic virus but not with antisera to its serotype prunus necrotic ringspot virus, or to prune dwarf virus. Yellow mosaic was induced in horse chestnut seedlings grafted with tissues from herbaceous hosts infected with horse chestnut isolates or with the European plum line pattern isolate of apple mosaic virus. Virus was detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in embryo and endosperm of immature seed from infected trees but not in mature seed, or progeny seedlings. Strawberry latent ringspot virus was detected in one of six A. hippocastanum trees with a leaf vein yellows disease.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The concentration of potato leafroll luteovirus (PLRV) did not differ in potato plants with secondary infections grown at 15°C or 27°C. Detached leaves of plants grown at 15°C or 27°C were used as sources of PLRV for peach-potato aphids (Myzus persicae Sulz.) both at 15°C and 27°C. At comparable temperature during virus acquisition, aphids which fed on leaves of plants kept previously at 15°C contained more viral antigen detected by ELISA than aphids which fed on leaves of plants grown at 27°C. The aphids which acquired PLRV at 27°C contained evidently more viral antigen than those which acquired PLRV at 15°C. The greatest amount of PLRV was found in the aphids which acquired the virus at 27°C from the leaves of plants kept at 15°C. The ability of M. persicae to transmit PLRV to Physalis ftoridana Rydb. generally decreased with decrease in the amount of PLRV in vectors.  相似文献   

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