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Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture
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Con Baker
Robert Davis
Rosemarie Hammond
John Hartung
Ing Ming Lee
Lev Nemchinov
Anna Smigocki
Yan Zhao
 

Potato yello vein virus
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Biological and molecular characterization of Potato yellow vein virus

Sporadic outbreaks of potato yellow vein disease (PYVD) were first observed in the early 1940's by potato growers in Antioquia, Colombia. Long known to be transmittted by the greenhouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporariorium), the precise identity of its causal agent (presumably viral in nature) has remained obscure. Here, we present evidence that a closterovirus with a bipartite genome, potato yellow vein virus (PYVV), is associated with PYVD. Electrophoretic analysis revealed that diseased tissue contains 4-5 disease-specific dsRNAs ranging in size from c. 9,000 - 1,800 bp. RT-PCR reacctions containing pairs of degenerate primers directed against conserved motifs in the closterovirus heat-shock protein homologue produced products of the expected sizes. Comparison of the corresponding amino acid sequences revealed striking similarities between PYVV and two bipartite, whitefly-transmitted criniviruses, Cucurbit yellow stunting disorder and Tomato chlorosis viruses. Epidemiological surveys carried out in Rio Negro, Colombia identified Polygonum mepalense, Polygonum spp., Rumex obtusifolium, Tagetes spp., and Catharanthus roseus as potential viral reservoirs. PYVV is transmitted through tubers, and visual symptoms alone cannot be used to determine infection status. A sensitive hybridization-based assay for PYVV has been developed for use in seed certification programmes.

Farmer with potato yellow vein virus-infected potatoes Comparision of uninfected and potato yellow vein virus-infected potatoes

Potato yellow vein disease. Potato yellow vein disease was first observed in Antioqua, Colombia as early as 1943, and disease incidence rapidly reached alarming levels. Affected plants produce fewer tubers than healthy controls, and yield reductions of as much as 50% have been reported.

Salazar, L.F., Müller, G., Querci, M., Zapata, J.L., and Owens, R.A. 2000. Potato yellow vein virus: its host range, distribution in South America, and identification as a crinivirus transmitted by Trialeurodes vaporariorum. Ann. Appl. Biol. 137, 7-19.


   
 
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Last Modified: 10/28/2005
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