Literature DB >> 30743422

Recognition and Molecular Discrimination of Severe and Mild PVYO Variants of Potato virus Y in Potato in New Brunswick, Canada.

Bihua Nie1, Mathuresh Singh2, Andrew Sullivan3, Rudra P Singh4, Conghua Xie5, Xianzhou Nie6.   

Abstract

A field isolate of Potato virus Y (PVY) was collected in New Brunswick, Canada in 2007 due to unusual symptoms observed on different potato cultivars. To unveil the PVY strain identity, tobacco and potato bioassays, PVYO and PVYN-specific antibody-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, and reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based genotyping were carried out. All the assays demonstrated that the isolate, designated as PVYO-FL in this study, belonged to the PVYO strain group. Greenhouse tests with the potato cvs. FL 1533 and Jemseg confirmed the severe nature of infection by PVYO-FL. The complete genome sequences of PVYO-FL and PVYO-RB, the latter a mild PVYO isolate, were determined. BLAST analysis revealed that the two isolates shared 97 and 98% sequence identities at the nucleotide and polyprotein levels, respectively. Further BLAST analysis unveiled that PVYO-FL shared 99.7% nucleotide sequence identity with PVYO-Oz, an isolate reported in New York, United States, whereas the PVYO-RB isolate shared 99.2% sequence identity with PVYO-139, a PVYO isolate reported in New Brunswick, Canada. A phylogenetic tree of available, full-length sequences of PVY isolates demonstrated two subgroups within the PVYO branch, one clustered with PVYO-RB and the other with PVYO-FL. Group-specific sense primers for differentiation of the two subgroups were developed and evaluated. A limited survey of potato tubers collected from a field plot at the Potato Research Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, using the newly developed PCR primers, indicated that 65.3 and 2.4% of the PVYO-positive tubers were infected with PVYO isolates belonging to the PVYO-FL and PVYO-RB subgroups, respectively. Assessment of the pathogenicity of three representative isolates from each subgroup on the potato cv. Jemseg demonstrated that severe and mild symptoms were induced by the PVYO-FL-like and PVYO-RB-like isolates, respectively.

Entities:  

Year:  2011        PMID: 30743422     DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-04-10-0257

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Dis        ISSN: 0191-2917            Impact factor:   4.438


  3 in total

1.  Global Screening and Functional Identification of Major HSPs Involved in PVY Infection in Potato.

Authors:  Kun Li; Ruhao Chen; Zheng Tu; Xianzhou Nie; Botao Song; Changzheng He; Conghua Xie; Bihua Nie
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-23       Impact factor: 4.141

2.  Generation of virus-resistant potato plants by RNA genome targeting.

Authors:  Xiaohui Zhan; Fengjuan Zhang; Ziyang Zhong; Ruhao Chen; Yong Wang; Ling Chang; Ralph Bock; Bihua Nie; Jiang Zhang
Journal:  Plant Biotechnol J       Date:  2019-03-08       Impact factor: 9.803

3.  Susceptibility factor StEXA1 interacts with StnCBP to facilitate potato virus Y accumulation through the stress granule-dependent RNA regulatory pathway in potato.

Authors:  Ruhao Chen; Zhen Tu; Changzheng He; Xianzhou Nie; Kun Li; Sitian Fei; Botao Song; Bihua Nie; Conghua Xie
Journal:  Hortic Res       Date:  2022-02-13       Impact factor: 7.291

  3 in total

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