The effect of Benlate and cytokinins on the content of tobacco mosaic virus in tomato leaf disks and cucumber mosaic virus in cucumber cotyledon disks and seedlings |
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Authors: | K. W. BAILISS,F. M. COCKER&dagger ,A. C. CASSELLS&dagger |
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Affiliation: | *Departments of Plant Sciences, Wye College (University of London), Wye, Ashford, Kent, TN25 5AH;†Department of Horticulture, Wye College (University of London), Wye, Ashford, Kent, TN25 5AH |
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Abstract: | Tomato leaf disks were inoculated with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) and floated for 7 days on solutions of kinetin and benzyladenine in the range 20-0-002 mg/1. Virus content was reduced at the higher and increased at the lower concentrations. Benlate and benomyl showed a peak of cytokinin activity in the Amaranthus betacyanin bioassay equivalent to c. 0–002 fig/l kinetin. At concentrations above 25 and 100 mg a.i./l for Benlate and benomyl respectively, both compounds increased the TMV content of tomato leaf disks. Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) content in cucumber cotyledon disks was increased by Benlate and benomyl treatment (50–100 mg/1). Applied as a soil drench (50–500 mg a.i./l) when the plants were inoculated, Benlate increased the CMV content of infected seedlings. The number of starch-iodide lesions (a measure of susceptibility) was unaltered in cotyledons treated with Benlate 7 days before or immediately after inoculation. Infectivity of crude infective cucumber sap was unaffected by benomyl incorporation, whereas Benlate reduced infectivity at higher concentrations (1000–5000 mg/1). Under the experimental conditions described, Benlate, benomyl, benzyladenine and kinetin had no effect on the chlorophyll content of tomato leaf disks, and intact seedlings. |
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