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Title: Genetic and phenotypic variation of the Pepper golden mosaic virus complex.
Authors: Brown, J.K.
Idris, A.M.
Ostrow, K.M.
Goldberg, N.
French, R.
Stenger, D.C.
USDA, ARS
Source: Phytopathology. 2005 Oct., v. 95, no. 10, p. 1217-1224.
NALT Subjects: Capsicum annuum
Begomovirus
Serrano golden mosaic virus
pathogenicity
DNA profiling
nucleotide sequences
genetic variation
phenotypic variation
pathotypes
phylogeny
Texas
Other Subjects: molecular sequence data
Pepper golden mosaic virus
Issue Date: Oct-2005
Abstract: Three isolates of the bipartite begomovirus Pepper golden mosaic virus (PepGMV) were characterized for genomic and biological properties. The complete nucleotide sequences of the DNA-A and DNA-B components were determined from infectious clones of PepGMV-Serrano (PepGMV-Ser), PepGMV-Mosaic (PepGMV-Mo), and PepGMV-Distortion (PepGMV-D). Nucleotide sequence identity among PepGMV components ranged from 91 to 96% for DNA-A and from 84 to 99% for DNA-B, with each PepGMV component most closely related to the corresponding component of Cabbage leaf curl virus (CaLCV). However, phylogenetic relationships among begomovirus components were incongruent because DNA-A of PepGMV and CaLCV share an inferred evolutionary history distinct from that of DNA-B. The cloned components of PepGMV-Ser, -Mo, and -D were infectious by biolistic inoculation to pepper but differed in symptom expression: PepGMV-Ser exhibited a bright golden mosaic, PepGMV-Mo produced a yellow-green mosaic, and PepGMV-D caused only a mild mosaic and foliar distortion followed by a “recovery” phenotype in which leaves developing after initial symptom expression appeared normal. Differences in symptoms also were observed on tomato, tobacco, and Datura stramonium. Progeny virus derived from clones of PepGMV-Ser and -Mo were transmitted from pepper to pepper by the B biotype of Bemisia tabaci; progeny virus derived from PepGMV-D clones was not transmissible by the B biotype. Reassortant genomes derived from heterologous DNA components of the three isolates were infectious in all possible pairwise combinations, with symptom phenotype in pepper determined by the DNA-B component. Collectively, these results indicate that the three virus isolates examined may be considered distinct strains of PepGMV that have the capacity to exchange genetic material.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/2235
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

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IND43753376.pdf497KbAdobe PDFView/Open

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