First report of Grapevine Algerian latent virus in carnation in New Zealand

Carnation (Dianthus caryophyllus) is a popular ornamental plant widely used as a cut flower and in landscaping. In New Zealand, several viruses are known to infect plants of the genus Dianthus: arabis mosaic virus, carnation etched ring virus (CERV), carnation latent virus, carnation mottle virus, c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant disease 2022-12, Vol.106 (12)
Hauptverfasser: Tang, Joe, Lilly, Sonia, Veerakone, Stella, Kanchiraopally, Deepika, Kelly, Michelle, Delmiglio, Catia, Thompson, Jeremy R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Carnation (Dianthus caryophyllus) is a popular ornamental plant widely used as a cut flower and in landscaping. In New Zealand, several viruses are known to infect plants of the genus Dianthus: arabis mosaic virus, carnation etched ring virus (CERV), carnation latent virus, carnation mottle virus, carnation necrotic fleck virus, carnation ringspot virus, carnation vein mottle virus and cucumber mosaic virus (Veerakone et al. 2015). In October 2020, a carnation sample with leaf chlorotic spots and distortion from a home garden in Auckland, New Zealand was submitted to the Plant Health and Environment Laboratory (PHEL) for virus testing. Leaf tissue of the sample was mechanically inoculated onto a range of herbaceous species using the method described in Tang et al. (2013). Chenopodium amaranticolor and C. quinoa plants developed local necrotic pinpoint spots while Nicotiana benthamiana, N. clevelandii, and N. occidentalis plants exhibited systemic leaf mosaic symptoms 7 days post-inoculation. The carnation plant and all five symptomatic indicator species tested positive for tombusviruses using an in-house designed generic RT-qPCR (available on request). Direct sequencing of the ~140 bp PCR product revealed the presence of grapevine Algerian latent virus (GALV). To further characterise the detected sequence, forward (5'-GTAGCGATGTATTGGGATAAGGA-3') and reverse (5'-TGCCGACACCCCGAAAGGT-3') primers were designed based on an alignment of the conserved region in the coat protein (CP) of 19 GALV isolates deposited in GenBank. Products of the expected size of 406 bp were amplified from all infected plants and their sequences found to be identical (GenBank accession No. OM891837). BLAST searches showed that the CP region of the sequence shared 97.0% (nucleotide) and 97.8% (amino acid) identity to the type isolate of GALV (GenBank accession no. NC_011535). GALV was first reported in Italy from a symptomless Algerian grapevine (Vitis vinifera) (Gallitelli et al., 1989), and is the only report of GALV in Vitis in the world. Since then, GALV has been reported in Germany, the Netherlands and Japan in several ornamental plant species including Alstroemeria sp. (Tomitaka et al., 2016), Gypsophila paniculata, Limonium sinuatum (Koenig et al., 2004, Fujinaga et al., 2009) and Solanum mammosum (Ohki et al., 2006). These infected ornamental host plants were reported to show various types of foliar symptoms, including chlorotic leaf spots. The GALV-infected carnation plant in th
ISSN:0191-2917
1943-7692
DOI:10.1094/PDIS-03-22-0597-PDN