scholarly journals Host Range and Characterization of Sunflower mosaic virus

2002 ◽  
Vol 92 (7) ◽  
pp. 694-702 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. J. Gulya ◽  
P. J. Shiel ◽  
T. Freeman ◽  
R. L. Jordan ◽  
T. Isakeit ◽  
...  

Sunflower mosaic is caused by a putative member of the family Potyviridae. Sunflower mosaic virus (SuMV) was characterized in terms of host range, physical and biological characteristics, and partial nucleotide and amino acid sequence. Cells infected with SuMV had cytoplasmic inclusion bodies typical of potyviruses. Of 74 genera tested, only species in Helianthus, Sanvitalia, and Zinnia, all Asteraceae, were systemic hosts. Commercial sunflower hybrids from the United States, Europe, and South Africa were all equally susceptible. The mean length of purified particles is approximately 723 nm. The virus was transmitted by Myzus persicae and Capitphorus elaegni, and also was seedborne in at least one sunflower cultivar. Indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay tests with a broad-spectrum potyvirus monoclonal antibody were strongly positive. SuMV-specific polyclonal antisera recognized SuMV and, to a lesser extent, Tobacco etch virus (TEV). When tested against a panel of 31 potyvirus-differentiating monoclonal antibodies, SuMV was distinct from any potyvirus previously tested. SuMV shared four epitopes with TEV, but had a reaction profile more similar to Tulip breaking virus (TBV). SuMV did not possess epitopes unique only to TBV. The predicted coat protein had a molecular weight of 30.5 kDa. The 3′ end of the virus genome was cloned and sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis of the coat protein amino acid sequence revealed that SuMV is a distinct species within the family Potyviridae, most closely related to TEV.

1972 ◽  
Vol 36 (7) ◽  
pp. 1109-1116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kotoku KURACHI ◽  
Gunki FUNATSU ◽  
Masaru FUNATSU ◽  
Soh HIDAKA

1998 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 1677-1682 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yukio Shirako

ABSTRACT RNA 2 of soil-borne wheat mosaic virus (SBWMV), the type species of the genus Furovirus, encodes a protein previously hypothesized to be initiated at an in-frame non-AUG codon upstream of the AUG initiation codon (nucleotide positions 334 to 336) for the 19-kDa capsid protein. Site-directed mutagenesis and in vitro transcription and translation analysis indicated that CUG (nucleotides 214 to 216) is the initiation codon for a protein with a calculated molecular mass of 25 kDa composed of a 40-amino-acid extension to the N terminus of the 19-kDa capsid protein. A stable deletion mutant, which was isolated after extensive passages of a wild-type SBWMV, contained a mixture of two deleted RNA 2’s, only one of which coded for the 25-kDa protein. The amino acid sequence of the N-terminal extension was moderately conserved and the CUG initiation codon was preserved among three SBWMV isolates from Japan and the United States. This amino acid sequence conservation, as well as the retention of expression of the 25-kDa protein in the stable deletion mutant, suggests that the 25-kDa protein is functional in the life cycle of SBWMV. This is the first report of a non-AUG translation initiation in a plant RNA virus genome.


2001 ◽  
Vol 75 (18) ◽  
pp. 8831-8836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyotaro Hirashima ◽  
Yuichiro Watanabe

ABSTRACT Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) encodes a 30-kDa movement protein (MP) which enables viral movement from cell to cell. It is, however, unclear whether the 126- and 183-kDa replicase proteins are involved in the cell-to-cell movement of TMV. In the course of our studies into TMV-R, a strain with a host range different from that of TMV-U1, we have obtained an interesting chimeric virus, UR-hel. The amino acid sequence differences between UR-hel and TMV-U1 are located only in the helicase-like domain of the replicase. Interestingly, UR-hel has a defect in its cell-to-cell movement. The replication of UR-hel showed a level of replication of the genome, synthesis, and accumulation of MP similar to that observed in TMV-U1-inoculated protoplasts. Such observations support the hypothesis that the replicase coding region may in some fashion be involved in cell-to-cell movement of TMV.


Plant Disease ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 103 (7) ◽  
pp. 1605-1612 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chih-Hung Huang ◽  
Chia-Hsing Tai ◽  
Ruey-Song Lin ◽  
Chung-Jan Chang ◽  
Fuh-Jyh Jan

Dendrobium smillieae is one of the popular orchids in Taiwan. This report describes a new potyvirus tentatively named Dendrobium chlorotic mosaic virus (DeCMV) causing chlorotic and mosaic symptoms in D. smillieae. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) tests using six antisera against orchid-infecting viruses revealed that only a monoclonal antibody against the potyvirus group reacted positively with crude saps prepared from a symptomatic dendrobium orchid. Potyvirus-like, flexuous, filamentous particles were observed under an electron microscope, measuring approximately 700 to 800 nm in length and 11 to 12 nm in diameter. Sequence analyses revealed that DeCMV coat protein gene shared 59.6 to 66.0% nucleotide sequence identity and 57.6 to 66.0% amino acid sequence identity, whereas the DeCMV complete genome shared 54.1 to 57.3% nucleotide sequence identity and 43.7 to 49.5% amino acid sequence identity with those other known potyviruses. These similarity levels were much lower than the criteria set for species demarcation in potyviruses. Thus, DeCMV can be considered a new potyvirus. The whole DeCMV genome contains 10,041 nucleotides (GenBank accession no. MK241979) and encodes a polyprotein that is predicted to produce 10 proteins by proteolytic cleavage. In a pathogenicity test, results of inoculation assays demonstrated that DeCMV can be transmitted to dendrobium orchids by grafting and mechanical inoculation, as verified by ELISA and western blot analyses using the DeCMV polyclonal antiserum and by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction using the coat protein gene-specific primers. The inoculated orchids developed similar chlorotic and mosaic symptoms. In conclusion, DeCMV is a novel orchid-infecting potyvirus, and this is the first report of a new potyvirus that infects dendrobium orchids in Taiwan.


Plant Disease ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 85 (12) ◽  
pp. 1289-1289 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y.-C. Chang ◽  
Y.-L. Chen ◽  
F.-C. Chung

In 1998, a new mosaic disease of calla lily (Zantedeschia spp.) was found in Taichung County, Taiwan. Primary symptoms were mosaic and green islands on leaves and discolored spots on flowers. Symptomatic plants were negative in double-antibody sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (DAS-ELISA) for Dasheen mosaic virus (DsMV) polyclonal antibody (Agdia Inc., Elkhart, IN), but were positive in indirect ELISA using an anti-potyvirus group monoclonal antibody. Extracts from these plants were infective by mechanical inoculation to seedlings of calla lily and Philodendron selloum, which expressed veinal chlorosis, mosaic, and green island symptoms. Transmission electron microscopic analysis indicated that the virus particles purified from inoculated P. selloum were 695 to 845 nm long. In addition, potyvirus-specific cytoplasmic inclusions were observed in epidermal cells of infected calla lily. The 3′-terminal region of the virus was amplified by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction from total RNA or viral RNA using a potyvirus-specific degenerate primer and an oligo(dT) primer. A 1.6-kb amplified fragment was cloned, and three independent clones were sequenced. The sequences included a portion of NIb gene, the coat protein (CP) gene, the 3′ untranslated region (3′UTR) and the poly(A) tail. This nucleotide sequence (GenBank Accession No. AF332872) was checked against the international sequence databases using the BLAST program (provided by National Center for Biotechnology Information online at www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast/ ). The highest identity of the CP amino acid sequences between this unknown virus and other potyviruses is 68%. Amino acid sequence homologies for the CPs between individual potyviruses are 38 to 71%, while those between strains of a potyvirus are more than 90% (1). Therefore, this Zantedeschia-infecting virus is a previously undescribed potyvirus and is herein designated as Zantedeschia mosaic virus (ZaMV). In further analyses, the amino acid sequence identities of the CP gene between ZaMV and 13 other aphid-transmitted potyviruses were 46 to 61% and 9 to 23% for the nucleotide sequence of the 3′UTR. ZaMV and DsMV showed 46% identity in the CP amino acid sequence and 12% identity in the 3′UTR nucleotide sequence, indicating that they are two distinct members of the genus Potyvirus. To our knowledge, this is the first report of natural infection of Zantedeschia spp. by ZaMV, a new potyvirus identified in Taiwan. Reference: (1) D. D. Shukla and C. W. Ward. Arch. Virol. 106:171, 1989.


1998 ◽  
Vol 88 (9) ◽  
pp. 965-971 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Hammond

Antisera to the cytoplasmic inclusion proteins (CIPs) of bean yellow mosaic (BYMV), clover yellow vein (ClYVV), turnip mosaic (TuMV), sweet potato feathery mottle (SPFMV), and maize dwarf mosaic (MDMV) potyviruses were used to examine the relationships between the CIPs of 18 potyviruses. The antisera to CIPs of BYMV, ClYVV, TuMV, and SPFMV cross-reacted to most or all of the purified CIPs tested in western blot assays. The MDMV CIP antiserum reacted significantly only to the MDMV and sorghum mosaic virus CIPs. Reactivity of antisera to CIPs of dicot-infecting viruses was generally higher with CIPs of other dicot-infecting than with monocot-infecting potyvirus CIPs. Analysis of amino acid sequences of the CI genes of 11 well-characterized potyviruses suggested that epitopes specific for individual potyviruses are primarily in the C-terminal domains of the CIP, whereas epitopes shared among different viruses are clustered in the N-terminal domains. The most highly conserved predicted epitope overlaps the nucleotide binding motif of the N-terminal helicase domain of the CIP. Antibodies to this domain will probably be present in antisera to any potyvirus CIP and contribute to the cross-reactivity observed. Differences in the C-terminal domains may correlate with interactions between the CIP and coat protein necessary for replication and movement.


2001 ◽  
Vol 276 (23) ◽  
pp. 20039-20047 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi-Min She ◽  
Steve Haber ◽  
Dallas L. Seifers ◽  
Alexander Loboda ◽  
Igor Chernushevich ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 89 (4) ◽  
pp. 430-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. L. Robertson ◽  
D. C. Ianson

In July 2003, noticeable red lesions were observed on rhubarb leaves (Rheum rhababarum cv. Kerwin) from a plant at the Arctic Plant Germplasm Research and Introduction Project in Palmer, AK. Extracts of leaf tissue tested positive for a potyvirus using indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and western blots with a monoclonal antibody specific to the potyvirus group (Agdia, Inc., Elkhart, IN). During the following growing season (June 2004), obvious chlorotic ringspots developed into red lesions on the same plant and an adjacent plant of the same cultivar. Partially purified particles that were isolated from the infected rhubarb plants were mechanically inoculated to an experimental host range (number of infected plants per total number of plants), resulting in lesions on leaves of Rheum palmatum (1 of 2) and Chenopodium amaranticolor (3 of 5) but none on C. quinoa (0 of 4). The leaves with local lesions from C. amaranticolor were ground in phosphate buffer (1 g of tissue per 10 ml of buffer), and the extract rubbed onto a set of plants resulting in lesions on R. hybridum (raponticum) (1 of 2), C. amaranticolor (1 of 4), and C. quinoa (1 of 4). The original diseased rhubarb plants and experimental symptomatic plants were confirmed to have a potyvirus using ELISA. Subsequent compound direct ELISA and western blot assays revealed that the virus reacted strongly to monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies to Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) (Agdia, Inc.). Total RNA was extracted from leaves of the naturally infected rhubarb plants with an RNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen Sciences, Germantown, Maryland), and used in reverse-transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) with specific primers for TuMV (1) predicted to amplify a 1,134-bp 3′-terminal cDNA fragment encompassing the 3′-end of the nuclear inclusion protein gene (NIb), the coat protein gene, and the 3′-nontranslated region. A PCR product of approximately the expected size was obtained and then sequenced. Sequences (1,077 nt) that corresponded to the TuMV coat protein gene and 3′-terminal noncoding region were submitted to Genbank (Accession No. AY744930). Blast searches against NCBI (National Center for Biotechnology Information) contained high identities to many TuMV isolates with up to 96% (1,043 of 1,077) nucleotide identity (i.e., GenBank Accession No. AF169561). Similar high identities of up to 97% at the amino acid level occurred within the coat protein coding region (i.e., GenBank Accession No. BAC02892.1). Infected rhubarb plants were removed from the site and none of the remaining 109 plants tested positive for TuMV using ELISA. On the basis of the mechanical transmission to plant hosts, the definitive TuMV serology, and the consensus of sequenced regions with TuMV, we concluded that the causal agent of the diseased rhubarb plants was TuMV. Although TuMV has a wide plant host range occurring worldwide (2), to our knowledge, this is the first report of TuMV in rhubarb in Alaska and the first time that TuMV has been detected in Alaska. References: (1) P. Lehmann et al. Physiol. Mol. Plant Pathol. 51:195, 1997. (2) R. Provvidenti. Page 1340 in: Viruses of Plants. A. A. Brunt et al., eds. CAB International, Wallingford, UK, 1996.


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