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Journal ArticleDOI

Pepino mosaic virus, a new potexvirus from pepino (Solanum muricatum)

Roger A. C. Jones, +2 more
- 01 Jan 1980 - 
- Vol. 94, Iss: 1, pp 61-68
TLDR
Pepino mosaic virus (PepMV), a previously undescribed virus, was found in fields of pepino in the Canete valley in coastal Peru and its properties are typical of the potexvirus group.
Abstract
SUMMARY Pepino mosaic virus (PepMV), a previously undescribed virus, was found in fields of pepino (Solanum muricatum) in the Canete valley in coastal Peru. PepMV was transmitted by inoculation of sap to 32 species from three families out of 47 species from nine families tested. It caused a yellow mosaic in young leaves of pepino and either a mild mosaic or symptomless infection in 12 wild potato species, five potato cultivars and potato clone USDA 41956 but S. stoloniferum and potato cultivars Merpata and Revolucion reacted with severe systemic necrotic symptoms. The virus was transmitted by plant contact but not by Myzus persicae. It was best propagated and assayed in Nicotiana glutinosa. Sap from infected N. glutinosa was infective after dilution to 10-1 but not 10-6, after 10 min at 65°C but not 70°C and after 3 months at 20°C. PepMV had filamentous particles with a normal length of 508 nm; the ends of some seemed damaged. Ultra-thin sections of infected leaves of N. glutinosa revealed many inclusions containing arrays of virus-like particles some of which were banded or whorled; small aggregates of virus-like particles were also common. The virus was purified by extracting sap from infected leaves in a solution containing 0·065 M disodium tetraborate, 0·435 M boric acid, 0·2% ascorbic acid and 0·2% sodium sulphite at pH 7·8, adding silver nitrate solution to the extract, and precipitating the virus with polyethylene glycol followed by two cycles of differential centrifugation. Particles of PepMV normally yielded two proteins with molecular weights of 26 600 and 23 200, but virus obtained from infective sap aged overnight yielded only the smaller protein suggesting that it was a product of degradation of the larger one. The virus is serologically related to two potexviruses, narcissus mosaic and cactus X and its properties are typical of the potexvirus group.

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Citations
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Plant virus emergence and evolution: origins, new encounter scenarios, factors driving emergence, effects of changing world conditions, and prospects for control.

TL;DR: How rapid expansion in human activity and climate change are likely to impact on plants, vectors and viruses causing increasing instability is described, and the major factors driving virus emergence, evolution and greater epidemic severity at the interface are analysed and explained.
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Emerging Viral Diseases of Tomato Crops

TL;DR: Emerging viruses of tomato crops are discussed and several recently described new viruses such as Tomato torrado virus and new Tospovirus species are rapidly spreading over large geographic areas.
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Impact of Piriformospora indica on tomato growth and on interaction with fungal and viral pathogens

TL;DR: Piriformospora indica represents a suitable growth promoting endophyte for tomato which can be applied in production systems of this important vegetable plant not only in soil, but also in hydroponic cultures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deep Sequencing of Small RNAs in Tomato for Virus and Viroid Identification and Strain Differentiation

TL;DR: Data suggest that the sRNA deep sequencing technology will likely become an efficient and powerful generic tool for virus identification in plants and animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pepino mosaic virus: a successful pathogen that rapidly evolved from emerging to endemic in tomato crops

TL;DR: Pepino mosaic virus (PepMV) belongs to the Potexvirus genus of the Flexiviridae family as discussed by the authors, and it infects the Solanaceae family.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Protein subunits in the potato virus X group. Determination of the molecular weights by polyacrylamide electrophoresis.

TL;DR: Sonically produced fragments of rapidly purified potato virus X were almost stationary in immunoelectrophoresis at pH 8.5 and after treatment with trypsin yielded fragments which migrated toward the anode.
Book ChapterDOI

Plant virus serology.

TL;DR: The most commonly used serological test in plant virology is without question the precipitin reaction, which is less laborious than those in free liquid, they require less antiserum, and provide more information on the homogeneity and purity of the reactants and on the size of and relationships among antigens.
Book

Serological tests for the identification of plant viruses

Ellen M. Ball
TL;DR: Serological tests for the identification of plant viruses are used in medicine and science for the diagnosis of infectious diseases and the discovery of new viruses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some observations on the structure of the filamentous particles of several plant viruses.

TL;DR: Several plant viruses with filamentous particles ranging in modal lengths from 0.48 µ to 1.25 µ were negatively stained with uranyl formate, examined in the electron microscope, and the electron micrographs analysed in various ways.
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