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Association of tomato leaf curl New Delhi virus DNA-B with Bhendi yellow vein mosaic virus in okra showing yellow vein mosaic disease symptoms

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Title Association of tomato leaf curl New Delhi virus DNA-B with Bhendi yellow vein mosaic virus in okra showing yellow vein mosaic disease symptoms
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Creator Venkataravanappa V., C. N. Lakshminarayana Reddy, Salil Jalali, M. Krishna Reddy
 
Subject PCR; begomovirus; yellow vein mosaic; recombination; whitefly; phylogeny
 
Description Not Available
Okra samples showing yellow vein mosaic, vein twisting and bushy appearance were collected from different locations of India during the surveys conducted between years 2005–2009. The dot blot and PCR detection revealed that 75.14% of the samples were associated with monopartite begomovirus and remaining samples with bipartite virus. Whitefly transmission was established for three samples representing widely separated geographical locations which are negative to betasatellites and associated with DNA-B. Genome components of these three representative isolates were cloned and sequenced. The analysis of DNA-A-like sequence revealed that three begomovirus isolates shared more than 93% nucleotide sequence identity with bhendi yellow vein mosaic virus from India (BYVMV), a monopartite begomovirus species that was reported previously as causative agent of bhendi yellow mosaic disease in association of bhendi yellow vein mosaic betasatellite. Further, the DNA-B-like sequences associated with the three virus isolates shared no more than 90% sequence identity with tomato leaf curl New Delhi virus (ToLCNDV). Analyses of putative iteron-binding sequence required for trans-replication suggests that begomovirus sequences shared compatible rep-binding iterons with DNA-B of ToLCNDV. Our data suggest that the monopartite begomovirus associated with okra yellow vein disease has captured DNA-B of ToLCNDV to infect okra. Widespread distribution of the complex shows the increasing trend of the capturing of DNA-B of ToLCNDV by monopartite begomoviruses in the Indian subcontinent. The recombination analysis showed that the DNA-A might have been derived from the inter-specific recombination of begomoviruses, while DNA-B was derived from the ToLCNDV infecting different hosts.
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Date 2019-03-29T08:06:20Z
2019-03-29T08:06:20Z
2015-07-01
 
Type Article
 
Identifier 13
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http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/17786
 
Language English
 
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Publisher Not Available