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Identification and Characterization of Viruses Infecting Flower Crops in India

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Title Identification and Characterization of Viruses Infecting Flower Crops in India
 
Creator Nitika Gupta, Prabha K., Girish K.S., G.B. Kadam, T.N. Saha, Shilpashree K.G. and M.K. Reddy
 
Subject Ornamentals, Electron microscopy, RT-PCR, NCBI
 
Description Not Available
Virus diseases are of great economic importance in flower crops as most of them are propagated vegetatively. Many viral diseases cause significant losses in the quality of the flower making it unfit for export and viruses are very difficult to control. Recent advancement in the molecular biology have provided new tools for the identification of viruses. In this study genome sequence based detection and characterization have been employed successfully for identification of viruses infecting Gladiolus, Tuberose, Jasmine and Amaryllis. Plant samples showing characteristic symptoms of virus infection such as mosaic, mottling, streak, ring spot and yellow mosaic were collected and preliminary tests were conducted through Electron Microscopy by leaf dip method. The results indicated the presence of isometric, flexuous and bullet shaped particles in the infected leaf samples of Jasmine, where as in Gladiolus, Amaryllis and Tuberose only flexuous filamentous particles were observed. For molecular identification of these samples, total DNA and RNA was isolated and PCR and RT-PCR was performed using CMV, Badnavirus and Potyvirus specific primers. The DNA fragment was further processed and used for cloning and sequencing. Nucleotide sequences of the obtained amplicons were determined and compared with sequences present in the NCBI database using the BLAST algorithm. Results revealed the presence of Tuberose mild mottle virus in Tuberose, Bean yellow mosaic virus in Gladiolus, Amaryllis potyvirus in Amaryllis and CMV and Badnavirus in Jasmine. The virus-specific sequence information generated in this study can subsequently be used to develop PCR-based detection methods. Since most of the ornamentals and flower crops are propagated through bulbs and the mother stock once infected, act as a source for disease spread in successive generations. Therefore detection and certification of virus-free propagation material is imperative for production of quality flowers.
ICAR
 
Date 2020-03-11T09:09:30Z
2020-03-11T09:09:30Z
2020-01-20
 
Type Proceedings
 
Identifier http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/33721
 
Language English
 
Publisher IPS, New Delhi