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1.
Summary Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) is one of the agents causing the barley yellow mosaic disease. The sequence corresponding to the 3end of the BaMMV RNA1 of a German isolate was sequenced and the coding sequence for the 251 amino acid containing capsid protein was determined. Comparison of this sequence to other potyviral sequences and to the corresponding sequence of two Japanese isolates of BaMMV was done. The three different isolates of BaMMV show a high degree of similarity.Abbrevations BaMMV barley mild mosaic virus - BaYMV barley yellow mosaic virus; bp: base pair - IPTG isopropyl -D thiogalactopyranoside - kb kilo base - NTR nontranslated region - ORF open reading frame - PVDF polyvinylidene difluoride  相似文献   

2.
In field plots at Yancheng, Jiangsu, China, a range of European and Asian barley cultivars was grown in soil from three sites in China infested with barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV). Most of the cultivars resistant to the common European strain of BaYMV were susceptible to the Chinese isolates but cv. Energy remained disease-free. Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) was also detected in one of these soils but affected only one Chinese cultivar and not those susceptible to BaMMV in Europe. This is the first report of BaMMV in China. Inoculation experiments confirmed the different cultivar response to UK and Chinese isolates of BaYMV and showed that resistance was to the virus and not to the vector. A range of Chinese cultivars selected for resistance to BaYMV were also resistant to a UK isolate of BaMMV.  相似文献   

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After mechanical inoculation by rubbing off with infectious plant sap barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) was transmitted to 29 provenances and cultivars of Triticum durum Desf. var. africanum Körn. as well as to the Italian durum wheat cvs ‘Valforte’ and ‘Valnova’. The infected plants reacted partially with distinct mosaic symptoms. BaMMV was detected by ELISA and immunoelectron microscopy.  相似文献   

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Soil-borne barley yellow mosaic virus disease, caused by different strains of Barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) and Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV), is one of the most important diseases of winter barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) in Europe and East Asia. The recessive resistance gene rym11 located in the centromeric region of chromosome 4HL is effective against all so far known strains of BaMMV and BaYMV in Germany. In order to isolate this gene, a high-resolution mapping population (10,204 meiotic events) has been constructed. F2 plants were screened with co-dominant flanking markers and segmental recombinant inbred lines (RILs) were tested for resistance to BaMMV under growth chamber and field conditions. Tightly linked markers were developed by exploiting (1) publicly available barley EST sequences, (2) employing barley synteny to rice, Brachypodium distachyon and sorghum and (3) using next-generation sequencing data of barley. Using this approach, the genetic interval was efficiently narrowed down from the initial 10.72 % recombination to 0.074 % recombination. A marker co-segregating with rym11 was developed providing the basis for gene isolation and efficient marker-assisted selection.  相似文献   

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在山东省烟台地区的小麦上发生一种由土壤中禾谷多粘菌Polymyxa graminis传播的病毒病,感病小麦植株表现矮化褪绿和花叶症状.我们于1997年4月从病区采集感病小麦植株,进行了病毒种类鉴定.直接电镜观察发现有二种病毒粒子,一种粒子呈棒状,占大多数,其长度约为300nm和150nm; 另一种粒子呈线状,数量较少,长度为500nm~700nm.免疫电镜结果表明,棒状病毒粒子仅与土传小麦花叶病毒(soil-borne wheat mosaic virus, SBWMV)抗血清反应,而不与小麦黄花叶病毒(wheat yellow mosaic virus,WYMV)抗血清和小麦梭条斑花叶病毒(wheat spindle streat mosaic virus,WSSMV)抗血清反应;反之,线状病毒仅与WYMV、WSSMV抗血清反应,而不与SBWMV抗血清反应.用WYMV和SBWMV两种抗血清同时进行修饰时,线状病毒粒子和棒状病毒粒子均发生反应.  相似文献   

9.
After mechanical spraygun inoculation barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) was detected in barley cv. ‘Gerbel’ (control) as well as in rye cv. ‘Somro’, but not in wheat cv. ‘Kanzler’ and oat cv. ‘Alfred’. ELISA values of infected barley and rye were similar. Furthermore, infected rye plants developed symptoms typical for barley yellow mosaic virus infection.  相似文献   

10.
The biological and serological properties of two Japanese barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) strains (BaMMV-Kal and BaMMV-Nal) and a German BaMMV strain (BaMMV-M) were compared. Mechanical inoculation experiments showed that these three strains differed from one another in their ability to infect specific barley cultivars. BaMMV-Kal and BaMMV-M caused similar symptoms, but BaMMV-Nal clearly differed from them in its symptoms on some barley cultivars. The three BaMMV strains efficiently infected barley plants at 15°C, whereas at 20°C BaMMV-Kal and BaMMV-M also infected many plants but BaMMV-Nal infected only a few. BaMMV-Kal and BaMMV-M were indistinguishable by ELISA, while BaMMV-Nal was distinguished from both. The biological and serological variability reported shows that BaMMV occurs as two distinct strains in Japan.  相似文献   

11.
Ninety-three F(1)-derived doubled haploid (DH) lines from a complex breeders' cross involving the Japanese genotype 'Chikurin Ibaraki 1', which is resistant to barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) and two strains of barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV and BaYMV-2), three susceptible varieties ('Hamu', 'Julia' and a breeding line) and cv. 'Carola', which carries rym4 conferring resistance to BaMMV and BaYMV, were analysed for resistance to BaMMV, BaYMV and BaYMV-2. The DH lines fell into four phenotypic classes. In addition to completely resistant and susceptible genotypes, DHs were observed which were either resistant to BaMMV and BaYMV or to BaYMV and BaYMV-2. For BaMMV and BaYMV-2 resistance, segregation ratios approaching 1r:1s were observed, suggesting the presence of single resistance genes. In contrast, the segregation ratio for BaYMV fits a 3r:1s segregation ratio, suggesting the presence of two independently inherited genes. From the genetic analysis, we conclude that a resistance locus effective against BaYMV and BaYMV-2 originates from Chikurin Ibaraki 1 and segregates independently from the Carola-derived rym4 resistance that is effective against BaYMV and BaMMV. The BaMMV resistance in Chikurin Ibaraki 1 has probably been lost during population development. This hypothesis was tested using a simple-sequence repeat (SSR) marker (Bmac29) linked to rym4. All BaMMV-resistant DH lines supported amplification of the rym4-resistance diagnostic allele. To identify the genetic location of the Chikurin Ibaraki 1-derived resistance against BaYMV/BaYMV-2, bulked DNA samples were constructed from the four resistance classes, and bulked segregant analysis was performed using a genome-wide collection of SSRs. Differentiating alleles were observed at two linked SSRs on chromosome 5H. The location of this BaYMV/BaYMV-2 resistance locus was confirmed and further resolved by linkage analysis on the whole population using a total of five linked SSRs.  相似文献   

12.
Barley yellow mosaic disease caused by the bymoviruses barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) and barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) is one of the economically most important diseases of winter barley in Europe. In European barley breeding programmes, resistance is currently due to only two genes—rym4, which is effective against viruses BaMMV and BaYMV-1, and rym5, which is effective against BaYMV-2. Diversification of resistance is therefore an important task. Because the accession PI1963 confers immunity against all European strains of barley yellow mosaic disease and is not allelic to rym5, we have attempted to develop closely linked markers in order to facilitate the efficient introgression of this resistance into adapted germplasm. By means of restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis, we located a gene locus for resistance to BaMMV, BaYMV-1 and BaYMV-2 of PI1963 on chromosome 4HL using a mapping population (W757) comprising 57 doubled haploid (DH) lines. Subsequent tests for allelism indicated that the BaMMV resistance gene in PI1963 is allelic to rym11. Two DH populations, IPK1 and IPK2, comprising 191 and 161 DH lines, respectively, were derived from the initial mapping population W757 and used for further analysis. As random amplified polymorphic DNA development did not facilitate the identification of more closely linked markers, simple sequence repeat (SSR) analyses were conducted. For population IPK1, the closest SSRs detected were Bmac181 and Bmag353, which flank the gene at 2.1 cM and 2.7 cM, respectively. For the IPK2 population, the SSR markers HVM3 and Bmag353 are located proximally at 2.5 cM and distally at 8.2 cM, respectively. In order to develop markers more tightly linked to rym11, a targeted amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) marker identification approach was adopted using bulks comprising lines carrying recombination events proximal and distal to the target interval. Using this approach we identified six AFLP markers closely linked to rym11, with the two markers, E56M32 and E49M33, co-segregating with rym11 in both populations. The SSRs and AFLPs identified in this study represent useful tools for marker-assisted selection.  相似文献   

13.
Barley mild mosaic virus inside its fungal vector, Polymyxa graminis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In an electron microscope study to investigate the association of barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) with its fungal vector, Polymyxa graminis, thin sections were made of zoospores of the vector and of barley roots containing different stages in the life cycle of the fungus. Immunogold labelling was used to identify the virus in sections. Labelled bundles of presumed virus particles were seen in c. 1% of zoospores liberated from plant roots and in zoospores inside zoosporangia. A few zoosporangial plasmodia had localised labelling but no bundles were seen. No virus particles were seen in sections of resting spores.  相似文献   

14.
The Potyviridae are the largest family of plant-pathogenic viruses. Members of this family are the soil-borne bymoviruses barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) and barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV), which, upon infection of young winter barley seedlings in autumn, can cause yield losses as high as 50%. Resistance breeding plays a major role in coping with these pathogens. However, some viral strains have overcome the most widely used resistance. Thus, there is a need for novel sources of resistance. In ancient landraces and wild relatives of cultivated barley, alleles of the susceptibility factor PROTEIN DISULFIDE ISOMERASE LIKE 5–1 (PDIL5-1) were identified to confer resistance to all known strains of BaYMV and BaMMV. Although the gene is highly conserved throughout all eukaryotes, barley is thus far the only species for which PDIL5-1-based virus resistance has been reported. Whereas introgression by crossing to the European winter barley breeding pool is tedious, time-consuming and additionally associated with unwanted linkage drag, the present study exemplifies an approach to targeted mutagenesis of two barley cultivars employing CRISPR-associated endonuclease technology to induce site-directed mutations similar to those described for PDIL5-1 alleles that render certain landraces resistant. Homozygous primary mutants were produced in winter barley, and transgene-free homozygous M2 mutants were produced in spring barley. A variety of mutants carrying novel PDIL5-1 alleles were mechanically inoculated with BaMMV, by which all frameshift mutations and certain in-frame mutations were demonstrated to confer resistance to this virus. Under greenhouse conditions, virus-resistant mutants showed no adverse effects in terms of growth and yield.  相似文献   

15.
Breeding for resistant cultivars is the only way to prevent high yield loss in barley caused by the soil-borne barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) complex. We have characterized the BaMMV resistance of barley cv. Chikurin Ibaraki 1. Doubled haploid lines were obtained from the F1 between the susceptible six-rowed winter barley cultivar, Plaisant, and Chikurin Ibaraki 1. Each line was tested for reaction to BaMMV by mechanical inoculation followed by DAS-ELISA. Of 44 microsatellites that covered the genome, 22 polymorphic markers were tested on one susceptible and one resistant bulk, each comprising 30 lines. Differential markers and additional microsatellite markers in the same region were then tested on the whole population. A bootstrap analysis was used to compute confidence intervals of distances and to test the orders of the resistance gene and the closest markers. A segregation of 84 resistant/98 susceptible lines fitted a 1:1 ratio (2=1.08, P=0.30), which corresponds to a single gene in this DH lines population. The resistance gene was flanked by two markers near the centromeric region of chromosome 6HS—Bmag0173, at 0.6±1.2 cM, and EBmac0874, at 5.8 ± 3.4 cM. We propose to name this new resistance gene rym15. This resistance gene and associated markers will increase the possibilities to breed efficiently for new cultivars resistant to the barley mosaic disease.Communicated by P. Langridge  相似文献   

16.
Although a Chinese landrace of barley, Mokusekko 3, is completely resistant to all strains of Barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) and Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV), and is known to have at least two resistant genes, rym1 and rym5, only rym5 has been utilized for BaYMV resistant barley breeding in Japan. In order to clarify the effect of rym1 on BaYMV and BaMMV, and to utilize the gene for resistant barley breeding, the susceptibilities of only rym1 carrying breeding lines against BaYMV and BaMMV were investigated. In the assessment of resistance to BaYMV-I, 341 F(2) populations derived from a cross between the resistant line Y4 with only rym1 and the susceptible cv Haruna Nijo shows that the segregation loosely fits a 1R:3S ratio (0.05 > P > 0.01), suggesting that the resistance is controlled by a single recessive gene, rym1. Further, none of the F(3) lines derived from the nine resistant F(2) plants showed any disease symptoms in the field infected by BaYMV-I. The same nine F(3) lines showed almost the same agronomic characters in the field infected by BaYMV-III as those in the uninfected field, apart from the symptom of showing numerous mosaics. This result indicates that the gene rym1 has an acceptable level of resistance to BaYMV-III. In the assessment of resistance to BaYMV-II, BaMMV-Ka1 and -Na1, an artificial infection method was adopted and the susceptibilities to those viruses were investigated. Although the control varieties, Ko A and Haruna Nijo, were infected with all of them, the rym1 gene carrying BC(2)F(3) lines were completely resistant to all strains. In summary, rym1 is completely resistant to BaYMV-I, -II, BaMMV-Ka1 and -Na1, and has an acceptable level of resistance to BaYMV-III. This study concludes with a discussion of the reason why the important resistance gene rym1 was eliminated along with resistant cultivars during breeding for resistance to BaYMV.  相似文献   

17.
The complete nucleotide sequence of RNA1 of an Aschersleben isolate of barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) was determined. It consists of 7263 nucleotides (nt) excluding the 3' poly (A) tail. The 5' and 3' nontranslated regions (NTR) are 148 and 338 nt in length, respectively, and flank a single large open reading frame coding for a precursor polypeptide with a calculated molecular mass of 256 kDa. Sequence comparison revealed a 96% amino acid (aa) identity to RNA1 translation products of Japanese and French BaMMV isolates. Conserved nucleotide motifs in the 3' sense and 5' complementary sense NTR of the two genomic RNAs were identified that may represent the polymerase recognition sites. A range of constructs containing various parts of the coding region of the P3 nonstructural protein was prepared for expression in Escherichia coli . A short stretch of 35 aa in the C-proximal region of P3 appeared to be highly toxic to the bacterium.  相似文献   

18.
The soil-borne barley yellow mosaic virus disease (BaMMV, BaYMV, BaYMV-2) and the aphid-transmitted barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV) are serious threats to winter barley cultivation. Resistance to barley yellow mosaic virus disease has been identified in extensive screening programmes and several recessive resistance genes have been mapped, e.g. rym4, rym5, rym9, rym11, rym13. In contrast to barley yellow mosaic virus disease, no complete resistance to BYDV is known in the barley gene pool, but tolerant accessions have been identified and QTL for BYDV-tolerance have been detected on chromosomes 2HL and 3HL. The use of resistance and tolerance in barley breeding can be considerably improved today by molecular markers (RFLPs, RAPDs, AFLPs, SSRs, STSs, SNPs), as they facilitate (i) efficient genotyping and estimation of genetic diversity; (ii) reliable selection on a single plant level independent of symptom expression in the field (iii) acceleration of back crossing procedures; (iv) pyramiding of resistance genes; (v) detection of QTL and marker-based combination of positive alleles; and (vi) isolation of resistance genes via map-based cloning.  相似文献   

19.
In winter and early spring 2004 unequivocal mosaic symptoms were detected for the first time in Germany on six plants of the barley cv. ‘Tokyo’ carrying the resistance gene rym5. By serological and electron microscopic investigations Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) was identified in all plants and could be re‐transmitted to cv. ‘Tokyo’ as well as to additional cultivars carrying rym5. In contrast to this, genotypes carrying the resistance genes rym1 + rym5, Rym2, rym4, rym7, rym9, rym11, rym12, rym13, Rym14Hb, rym15 or Rym16Hb turned out to be resistant. Furthermore, the BaMMV isolates were not transmissible to different dicotyledonous species. Sequence analyses in the VPg coding region of RNA1 revealed differences to the known sequence of the original BaMMV isolate (BaMMV‐ASL1, AJ 242725) and also of a French pathotype (BaMMV‐Sil, AJ 544267, AJ 544268) which is also able to overcome the resistance mediated by rym5. At least in one location a spread of the area infested by this new strain was observed in 2004/2005 and 2005/2006.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Antisera were raised against the RNA 2-encoded proteins of 28 kDa and 70 kDa of barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) by using the corresponding cDNA sequences of a German isolate for protein overexpression inEscherichia coli BL 21 and subsequent purification. The proposed processing of a 98 kDa precursor polyprotein encoded by the long open reading frame of RNA 2 to two proteins of 28 kDa and 70 kDa could be confirmed by immunoprecipitation of the in vitro transcribed and translated cDNA-clone of RNA 2 and Western blot analysis of fragmentated protein extracts of BaYMV-infected winter barley plants. In situ localisation studies of infected leaf tissue using immunogold labeling techniques for electron microscopy revealed that both viral proteins of BaYMV (RNA 2) were associated with the crystal-like cytoplasmic inclusion bodies. No other parts of the cells and no other inclusions (pinwheelstructures or aggregated virus particles) showed any gold labeling when the 28 kDa and 70 kDa antisera were used. We suppose that both RNA 2-encoded proteins take part in the formation of the crystal-like cytoplasmic inclusion bodies which are the most dominant structures in the cytoplasm of BaYMV-infected tissue. Possible functions of the 28 kDa and 70 kDa protein of BaYMV (RNA 2) are discussed.Abbreviations PBS phosphate-buffered saline - CEA chicken egg albumin - BaYMV barley yellow mosaic virus - BaMMV barley mild mosaic virus  相似文献   

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