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Potato leaf curl - a new disease of potato in
northern India caused by a strain of Tomato leaf curl New Delhi virus
K. S. Usharani1, B. Surendranath1, S.M.
Paul-Khurana2, I.D. Garg2 and V.G. Malathi1*
1 Plant Virology Unit, Division of Plant Pathology,
Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi 110012, India
2 Central Potato Research Institute, Shimla, 171001, India
*vgmalathi@rediffmail.com
Accepted for publication 01/09/03
A severe leaf curl disease has been observed since 1999 in potato
(Solanum tuberosum) crops in northern India. The affected plants
were severely stunted with apical leaf curl and crinkled leaves and a
conspicuous mosaic (Fig 1). Garg et al. (2001) showed that, using
polyclonal antibodies to Indian cassava mosaic virus in
immunospecific electron microscopy, a begomovirus was associated
with this disease. We report here that the leaf curl disease in potato
is caused by a strain of Tomato leaf curl New Delhi virus
(ToLCNDV).

Figure 1. Potato plant showing severe leaf curl disease
The begomovirus from a severely affected potato plant was sap
transmitted to Nicotiana benthamiana seedlings in which it
induced severe leaf distortion and stunting 15 days post inoculation
(Fig 2). Meristem derived plantlets of potato cv. Kufri Anand inoculated
with sap from infected N. benthamiana leaves developed yellow
mottling, mosaic and leaf curl symptoms. Double stranded viral
replicative DNAs were purified from infected potato and N.
benthamiana plants and cloned at HindIII, BamHI,
XbaI and PstI
sites in the vector pUC18. The clones at the XbaI and PstI sites
had a unit genome length insert (~2.7 kb) which hybridized with the
viral replicative forms from the infected plants. The nucleotide
sequence of the XbaI and PstI clones corresponded to the
DNA A (Accession No. AY286316) and B (Accession No. AY158080) components
of the begomovirus causing the disease. Comparison of the complete
nucleotide sequence of DNA A revealed that it has 93-95% identity with
that of ToLCNDV isolates and <75% identity with other Tomato leaf
curl virus isolates and Potato yellow mosaic virus. A
whitefly transmitted begomovirus of potato has not been reported
previously in India, probably as potato crops on the North Indian plains
have been cultivated during winter months when whitefly populations are
low. However, in recent years, potato crops have been planted earlier
and this has resulted in a sufficient buildup of whitefly populations
that might have led to the emergence of a new disease in potato.

Figure 2. N. benthamiana showing severe leaf distortion after
inoculation
with the new potato begomovirus (putative strain of ToLCNDV)
This is the first observation of a begomovirus causing a severe
disease of potato in India. The nucleotide sequence data indicate that
the cause is a virus closely related to ToLCNDV which, unlike the strain
infecting potato, is not sap transmissible and is not known to infect
potato naturally. Therefore it is likely that a new strain of ToLCNDV
has emerged that infects a new host, potato.
References
Garg ID, Paul-Khurana SM, Kumar S, Lakra BS, 2001. Association of a
geminivirus with potato apical leaf curl in India and its
immuno-electron microscopic detection. Journal of Indian Potato
Association 28, 227-232.
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