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Narcissus late season yellows potyvirus: symptoms, properties and serological detection
Author(s) -
MOWAT W. P.,
DUNCAN G. H.,
DAWSON SHEILA
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.tb03330.x
Subject(s) - biology , narcissus , myzus persicae , potyvirus , virus , virology , plant virus , cultivar , potyviridae , inoculation , botany , horticulture , aphid
SUMMARY Narcissus late season yellows virus (NLSYV) was obtained, apparently unmixed with other viruses, in selected naturally infected narcissus plants. The virus was not transmitted by manual inoculation to any of the 12 herbaceous species tested but was transmitted by Myzus persicae to virus‐tested narcissus plants, which then developed symptoms characteristic of late season yellows. Typically, symptoms develop late in the growing season but their expression is unreliable. NLSYV particles, which measured c. 750 ± 12 nm, were purified from fresh leaf extracts of narcissus in 0·3 m sodium citrate containing 10 m m sodium EDTA and 10 m m sodium DIECA by differential centrifugation followed by clarification with diethyl ether, gel filtration and isopycnic banding in caesium sulphate. Using antibodies from antisera prepared to virus particles, NLSYV was detected by ELISA in 14 of the 18 cultivars examined and nine seemed totally infected. Detection of the virus by immunosorbent electron microscopy was as sensitive as by ELISA but neither test detected all infections. The virus was detected by ELISA only in samples collected after flowering and capsid antigen concentration was greatest in the distal region of leaves. The reliability of detection depended on the cultivar. Immuno‐electron microscopy tests confirmed the occurrence of a distinct potyvirus, presumably narcissus degeneration, in narcissus cv. Grand Soleil d'Or, failed to detect any virus other than NLSYV in narcissus plants affected by white streak disease, and showed that NLSYV is related to three of five other potyviruses tested.

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