Artichoke latent virus: characterisation, ultrastructure and geographical distribution |
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Authors: | G L RANA M RUSSO D GALLITELLI G P MARTELLI |
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Institution: | Istituto di Patologia vegetale, Universitàdegli Studi, Bari, Italy |
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Abstract: | An isolate of artichoke latent virus (ALV-I) obtained from a symptomless artichoke plant in Southern Italy was characterised and compared with ALV isolates from other countries. ALV occurs in California and throughout the western part of the Mediterranean basin but of Mediterranean countries east of Italy, it was found only in Israel and Turkey. ALV-I was readily transmissible by inoculation of sap to a moderate range of hosts, was transmitted in a non-persistent manner by Aphis fabae, Brachicaudus cardui and Myzus persicae, but was not seed transmitted. The virus has flexuous rod-shaped particles measuring c. 12 nm × 746 nm with a sedimentation coefficient of 145 S and a buoyant density of 1·31 g/cm3. The particles contain single stranded RNA with a mol. wt of 3 × 106 and protein composed of a single polypeptide species with a mol. wt of 33 000. Cylindrical cytoplasmic inclusions consisting of pinwheels and laminated aggregates were present in cells of naturally and artificially infected plants. ALV isolates from different geographical origin were indistinguishable from ALV-I biologically, morphologically, serologically and ultrastructurally. These properties place ALV in the Potyvirus group, but it was serologically unrelated to 12 other potyviruses 10 of which occur commonly in Italy. |
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