Turnip yellow mosaic virus in Chinese cabbage in Spain: commercial seed transmission and molecular characterisation

Seed transmission of Turnip yellow mosaic virus (TYMV, genus Tymovirus ) was evaluated in the whole seeds and seedlings that emerged from three commercial Chinese cabbage ( Brassica pekinensis ) seed batches. Seedlings in the cotyledon stage and adult plants were assayed for TYMV by DAS-ELISA and co...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of plant pathology 2016-10, Vol.146 (2), p.433-442
Hauptverfasser: Alfaro-Fernández, Ana, Serrano, Adrián, Tornos, Teodora, del Carmen Cebrián, María, del Carmen Córdoba-Sellés, María, Jordá, Concepción, Font, María Isabel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Seed transmission of Turnip yellow mosaic virus (TYMV, genus Tymovirus ) was evaluated in the whole seeds and seedlings that emerged from three commercial Chinese cabbage ( Brassica pekinensis ) seed batches. Seedlings in the cotyledon stage and adult plants were assayed for TYMV by DAS-ELISA and confirmed by RT-PCR. The proportion of whole seeds infected with TYMV was at least 0.15 %. The seeds of the three seed batches were grown in Petri dishes, and surveyed in the cotyledon stage in trays that contained a peat:sand mixture grown in greenhouses or growth chambers, which were analysed in the cotyledon and adult stages. The seed-to-seedling transmission rate ranged from 2.5 % to 2.9 % in two different seed batches (lot-08 and lot-09, respectively). Spanish isolates derived from turnip (Sp-03) and Chinese cabbage (Sp-09 and Sp-13), collected in 2003, 2009 and 2013 in two different Spanish regions, were molecularly characterised by analysing the partial nucleotide sequences of three TYMV genome regions: partial RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp), methyltransferase (MTR) and coat protein (CP) genes. Phylogenetic analyses showed that the CP gene represented two different groups: TYMV-1 and TYMV-2. The first was subdivided into three subclades: European, Australian and Japanese. Spanish isolate Sp-03 clustered together with European TYMV group, whereas Sp-09 and Sp-13 grouped with the Japanese TYMV group, and all differed from group TYMV-2. The sequences of the three different genomic regions examined clustered into the same groups. The results suggested that Spanish isolates grouped according to the original hosts from which they were isolated. The inoculation of the Spanish TYMV isolates to four crucifer plants species (turnip, broccoli, Brunswick cabbage and radish) revealed that all the isolates infected turnip with typical symptoms, although differences were observed in other hosts.
ISSN:0929-1873
1573-8469
DOI:10.1007/s10658-016-0929-3