| Literature DB >> 21193937 |
L-F Chen1, E Vivoda, R L Gilbertson.
Abstract
A full-length curtovirus genome was PCR-amplified and cloned from peppers in Mexico with symptoms of curly top disease. The cloned DNA of this isolate, MX-P24, replicated in Nicotiana tabacum protoplasts and was infectious in N. benthamiana plants. Sequence analysis revealed that the MX-P24 isolate had a typical curtovirus genome organization and was most similar to beet mild curly top virus (BMCTV). However, sequence identities were at the threshold value for establishment of a new curtovirus species. To further investigate the biological properties of MX-P24, an agroinoculation system was generated. Agroinoculated shepherd's purse plants developed typical curly top symptoms, and virus from these plants was transmissible by the beet leafhopper (Circulifer tenellus). The host range of MX-P24 was similar to that of BMCTV, with curly top symptoms induced in common bean, pepper, pumpkin, shepherd's purse and tomato plants and mild or no symptoms induced in sugar beet plants. Together, these results indicate that MX-P24 is a highly divergent strain of BMCTV associated with an outbreak of curly top disease in peppers in Mexico.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21193937 PMCID: PMC3066396 DOI: 10.1007/s00705-010-0884-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Virol ISSN: 0304-8608 Impact factor: 2.574
Percent nucleotide and amino acid (in parentheses) identities for the whole genome (total), intergenic region and open reading frames of a curtovirus isolate from Mexico (MX–P24) and isolates of Beet mild curly top virus (BMCTV) and other curtovirus species (Beet curly top virus [BCTV], Beet severe curly top virus [BSCTV], Horseradish curly top virus [HrCTV], Pepper yellow dwarf virus [PeYDV] and Spinach curly top virus [SCTV])
| Curtovirusa | Total | Intergenic region | Open reading frames | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IR | LIR | RIR | V3 | V2 | V1 | C3 | C2 | C1 | C4 | ||
| BMCTV-[MX:SLP2] | 97.9 | 94.5 | 100 | 92.7 | 99.6 (98.9) | 99.5 (97.6) | 99.5 (99.2) | 99.5 (98.5) | 99.3 (98.6) | 98.0 (98.1) | 98.4 (96.5) |
| BMCTV-[MX:05] | 96.7 | 88.3 | 96.8 | 85.5 | 98.2 (93.6) | 97.9 (93.7) | 98.2 (97.3) | 97.6 (94.9) | 97.5 (95.9) | 98.1 (98.1) | 99.2 (97.7) |
| BMCTV-[US:Wor4] | 88.9 | 70.6 | 86.3 | 65.7 | 88.3 (87.2) | 91.9 (89.0) | 91.5 (95.7) | 89.1 (86.1) | 92.1 (82.4) | 92.9 (93.9) | 94.2 (84.9) |
| BMCTV-[US:Wor] | 88.8 | 71.6 | 85.3 | 67.0 | 89.4 (87.2) | 92.9 (89.8) | 91.9 (95.7) | 89.1 (86.1) | 91.4 (81.1) | 92.7 (93.0) | 95.0 (87.2) |
| PeYDV | 83.7 | 63.1 | 81.1 | 58.6 | 89.0 (89.4) | 92.9 (92.1) | 88.0 (96.1) | 83.2 (85.4) | 84.9 (77.0) | 86.8 (93.6) | 88.4 (82.6) |
| BSCTV-[US:Cfh] | 79.6 | 56.9 | 63.5 | 54.4 | 87.9 (83) | 92.4 (87.4) | 91.2 (94.1) | 72.7 (67.2) | 60.4 (47.0) | 76.0 (76.7) | 67.4 (46.6) |
| BCTV-[US:Log:76] | 75.3 | 46.1 | 11.6 | 55.7 | 86.9 (81.9) | 91.3 (84.3) | 90.8 (94.1) | 70.1 (65.7) | 56.6 (40.3) | 71.5 (65.7) | 65.1 (38.4) |
| SCTV | 75.5 | 47.7 | 23.2 | 55.2 | 82.6 (81.9) | 76.0 (73.2) | 80.1 (91.9) | 76.0 (81.8) | 76.0 (65.5) | 72.1 (80.3) | 70.5 (51.2) |
| HrCTV | 58.8 | 40.9 | 32.7 | 27.2 | 74.8 (71.3) | 73.2 (70.9) | 77.3 (88.2) | NDb | 43.5 (25.0) | 56.9 (67.3) | 39.8 (16.5) |
aSequence comparisons included curtovirus sequences available in GenBank: BMCTV-[MX:SLP2] (EU586261), BMCTV-[MX:05] (EU193175), BMCTV-[US:Wor4] (AY134867), PeYDV (EU921828), BSCTV-[US:Cfh] (U02311), BCTV-[US:Log:76] (AF379637), SCTV (AY548948) and HrCTV (U49907)
bND = not determined because HrCTV lacks the homologous gene
Host range and symptomatology of a curtovirus isolate (MX-P24) associated with an outbreak of curly top in peppers in Mexico
| Inoculation method | Host | Infectivitya | Symptoms |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agroinoculation |
| 13/21 (4) | No obvious symptoms or mild up-curling and chlorosis of leaves |
|
| 18/18 (4) | Stunted growth and distorted and twisted leaves and stems | |
|
| 4/14 (3) | No obvious symptoms | |
|
| 7/11 (3) | Stunted growth and upward or downward curling, crumpling and interveinal chlorosis of leaves | |
|
| 65/66 (17) | Stunted growth and downward curling, crumpling, yellowing and distortion of leaves | |
|
| 11/24 (4) | Stunted growth and downward curling, crumpling and yellowing of leaves | |
|
| 15/24 (4) | Stunted and distorted growth and upward or downward curling, yellowing and interveinal chlorosis of leaves | |
| Leafhopper transmission |
| 7/12 (3) | No obvious symptoms or mild up-curling and chlorosis of leaves |
|
| 15/15 (4) | Stunted growth and distorted and twisted leaves and stems | |
|
| 3/8 (2) | Stunted growth and upward curling, crumpling, yellowing and interveinal chlorosis of leaves | |
|
| 7/12 (3) | Stunted growth and upward or downward curling, crumpling and interveinal chlorosis of leaves | |
|
| NDb | ND | |
|
| 10/12 (3) | Stunted growth and downward curling, crumpling and yellowing of leaves | |
|
| 13/15 (3) | Stunted and distorted growth and upward or downward curling, yellowing and interveinal chlorosis of leaves |
aThe number of plants infected/total inoculated is based on the development of disease symptoms or detection of curtovirus DNA in newly emerged leaves by PCR with general or MX-P24-specific primer pairs; the number in parentheses indicates the number of individual experiments
bNot determined because N. benthamiana is not a host for leafhopper feeding
Fig. 1Disease symptoms induced in selected plant species by a curtovirus isolate (MX-P24) associated with an outbreak of curly top in Mexico, and PCR detection of the virus with a specific primer pair. Symptoms in A, Nicotiana benthamiana; B, common bean (cv. Topcrop); C, tomato (cv. Glamour); D, pepper (cv. Golden California Wonder) and E, pumpkin (cv. Small Sugar) plants infected with MX-P24. F, Ethidium-bromide-stained gel showing DNA fragments amplified by PCR with curtovirus-specific primers individually paired with the general primer BGc1509 from DNA extracts prepared from MX-P24-infected and uninfected N. benthamiana plants. Lanes are as follows (primer names are shown in parentheses): 1, MX-P24 (MXv58); 2, BMCTV (BMCTVv2825); 3, BSCTV (BSCTVv2688); 4, BCTV (BCTVv2557) and 5, general curtovirus primer (BGv377)