- Volume 74, Issue 2, 1993
Volume 74, Issue 2, 1993
- Plant
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Tomato necrosis and the 369 nucleotide Y satellite of cucumber mosaic virus: factors affecting satellite biological expression
To determine which factors can affect biological expression of the Y satellite RNA of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) in tomato, three laboratoires collaboratively exchanged their natural satellite variants, the corresponding recombinant DNA clones and helper virus strains, as well as tomato varieties, on which different observations previously reported were based. The effects of these materials and the influence of temperature on symptom expression were systematically studied. The results show that in a standardized tomato bioassay at 24 °C, the Y satellite, when supported by either CMV-1 or CMV-Y, did not induce tomato necrosis in the Rutgers variety but elicited a slower necrotic response in the Best of All variety that was variably lethal, as compared to the faster inevitably lethal response induced by a prototype necrogenic D satellite variant in both tomato varieties. At higher temperatures (26·5 to 32 °C) an extremely fast-killing necrosis caused by CMV-Y itself was observed. The study demonstrates that in experiments on virus symptom modulation induced by CMV satellites, the nature of the helper virus, host plant varieties, as well as the environmental conditions should be precisely defined, and the effects of each parameter change determined separately.
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Biologically active transcripts from cloned cDNA of genomic grapevine fanleaf nepovirus RNAs
More LessTranscripts were produced in vitro by run-off transcription from full-length cDNA of RNA1 and RNA2 of grapevine fanleaf nepovirus (GFLV; isolate F13) cloned downstream from a bacteriophage RNA polymerase promoter. These transcripts, which possess a 5′ terminal cap structure and a non-viral G residue instead of the naturally occurring genome-linked viral protein (VPg), are infectious to Chenopodium quinoa protoplasts when inoculated by electroporation. Synthetic RNA1 alone replicated in protoplasts. Inoculation of C. quinoa plants with synthetic RNA1 plus RNA2 produced symptoms similar to, but weaker, than those observed in plants infected with natural GFLV 6 to 8 days post-inoculation. Co-inoculated RNA1 and RNA2 were able to replicate and spread systemically in plants but RNA1 alone produced no symptoms and was not detected in non-inoculated leaves, suggesting that virus spread requires RNA2. Analysis of the genomic RNAs in plants infected with transcripts showed that the non-viral G at their 5′ ends was not retained in the progeny.
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Molecular cloning and sequence analysis of a segment from Andean potato mottle virus B RNA encoding the putative RNA polymerase
Andean potato mottle virus (APMV), an endemic South American comovirus, has a bipartite genome consisting of two plus-strand RNA molecules (M and B RNA). We have cloned the 3′ half of the B RNA and identified the complete sequence of the putative APMV RNA polymerase. The RNA polymerase gene is part of a large polyprotein-encoding open reading frame. The putative, mature RNA polymerase, as deduced by comparison with the related cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV), type member of the comovirus group, is 703 amino acids long and shows a large degree of similarity with CPMV and other RNA polymerases.
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Protection against cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) strains O and Y and chrysanthemum mild mottle virus in transgenic tobacco plants expressing CMV-O coat protein
More LessTransgenic tobacco expressing the coat protein (CP) of cucumber mosaic virus strain O (CMV-O) showed a significant level of protection against CMV strains O and Y. When inoculum concentrations were increased, the transformants showed a stronger level of protection against CMV-O than against CMV-Y. The substitution of an amino acid residue between CMV-O and CMV-Y, which is presumed to change the conformation of CP, may reflect the difference in susceptibility to these viruses. Furthermore the transgenic tobacco plants showed a significant level of protection against chrysanthemum mild mottle virus, a member of the cucumovirus group but with no serological relationship to CMV.
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Volume 1 (1967)