Title
Synergistic interactions of a Potyvirus and a phloem-limited Crinivirus in sweet potato plants
Date Issued
30 March 2000
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Genetic Centre
Publisher(s)
Academic Press Inc.
Abstract
When infecting alone, Sweet potato feathery mottle virus (SPFMV, genus Potyvirus) and Sweet potato chlorotic stunt virus (SPCSV, genus Crinivirus) cause no or only mild symptoms (slight stunting and purpling), respectively, in the sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas L.). In the SPFMV-resistant cv. Tanzania, SPFMV is also present at extremely low titers, though plants are systemically infected. However, infection with both viruses results in the development of sweet potato virus disease (SPVD) characterized by severe symptoms in leaves and stunting of the plants. Data from this study showed that SPCSV remains confined to phloem and at a similar or slightly lower titer in the SPVD-affected plants, whereas the amounts of SPFMV RNA and CP antigen increase 600-fold. SPFMV was not confined to phloem, and the movement from the inoculated leaf to the upper leaves occurred at a similar rate, regardless of whether or not the plants were infected with SPCSV. Hence, resistance to SPFMV in cv. Tanzania was not based on restricted virus movement, neither did SPCSV significantly enhance the phloem loading or unloading of SPFMV. It is also noteworthy that SPVD is an unusual synergistic interaction in that the potyvirus component is not the cause of synergism but is the beneficiary. It is hypothesized that SPCSV is able to enhance the multiplication of SPFMV in tissues other than where it occurs itself, perhaps by interfering with systemic phloem-dependent signaling required in a resistance mechanism directed against SPFMV. (C) 2000 Academic Press.
Start page
26
End page
36
Volume
269
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias de las plantas, Botánica
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0034732230
PubMed ID
Source
Virology
ISSN of the container
00426822
Sponsor(s)
We thank H. J. Vetten (Federal Biological Research Center for Agriculture and Forestry, Braunschweig, Germany) for the polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to SPCSV, L. F. Salazar, S. Fuentes, and O. Hidalgo (The International Potato Center, Lima, Peru) for SPFMV antibodies and in vitro plants of cv. Tanzania, S. Vidal for the rDNA probe, and B.-L. Lennefors (Novartis Seeds, Landskrona, Sweden) for a culture of Myzus persicae. We are also grateful to P. Persson (Department of Plant Production and Ecology, SLU) for the greenhouse space where aphid experiments were carried out and B. Ekbom and C. Högfeldt (Department of Entomology, SLU) for rearing the aphids. Financial support from the Academy of Finland (Grant 34268) and Sida/SAREC (Grant SWE-1997-141) is gratefully acknowledged.
Sources of information:
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