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Relationships among strains of bean common mosaic virus and blackeye cowpea mosaic virus ‐ members of the potyvirus group
Author(s) -
LANA ALLAN FEMI,
LOHUIS H.,
BOS L.,
DIJKSTRA JEANNE
Publication year - 1988
Publication title -
annals of applied biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1744-7348
pISSN - 0003-4746
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7348.1988.tb03327.x
Subject(s) - biology , potyvirus , vigna , virus , virology , genotype , cucumovirus , host (biology) , plant virus , cucumber mosaic virus , genetics , gene , horticulture
SUMMARY In host‐range studies, bean common mosaic virus strains (BCMV‐NL1, ‐NL3 and ‐NY 15) usually induced distinct systemic symptoms in susceptible bean cultivars and latent infection in several Vigna genotypes (except NY15 which gave mosaic symptoms in the latter), while blackeye cowpea mosaic virus (B1CMV‐W) caused distinct systemic symptoms in several Vigna genotypes and only weak systemic symptoms in a few bean genotypes only. Biologically, B1CMV‐W was closest to BCMV‐NY15 and less close to ‐NL1. When using antisera to the three BCMV strains and five strains of B1CMV (including a strain originally considered cowpea aphid‐borne mosaic virus CAMV‐Mor) in SDS‐immunodiffusion and ELISA, BCMV‐NL1 and ‐NY15 were found to be closely related to each other and to BICMV‐Fla, ‐NR and ‐W, and less closely to BICMV‐Ind and ‐Mor. Serological relationships of BCMV‐NL1 and ‐NY15 to BCMV‐ NL3 were more distant, which is in line with the biological distinction of NL3 in causing temperature‐independent necrosis in bean cultivars with the necrosis gene I. PAGE analysis of coat proteins revealed that the three strains of BCMV and B1 CMV‐W have similar but non‐identical molecular masses. Although molecular hybridisation may further elucidate quantitative relationships between potyvir‐uses, variation within and among the potyviruses may continue to pose problems in their classification and identification.