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Guar leaf curl disease from India is caused by Tomato
leaf curl virus
J.A. Khan* S.S. Sohrab and Aminuddin
Plant Virology Lab, National Botanical Research Institute, Lucknow
226 001, India
*Jawaidkhan@satyam.net.in
Accepted for publication 07/04/03
Guar, Cyamopsis tetragonoloba, is cultivated in India and
other tropical countries as a vegetable, fodder and green manuring crop.
It is an economically important crop with its seed flour as the
commercial source of gum. National Botanical Research Institute (NBRI),
Lucknow, India, has a wide collection of guar germplasms. Since 2000, a
leaf curl disease of guar with geminivirus-like symptoms has been
consistently observed at the experimental plots of NBRI, during the
rainy season. The symptoms consisted of curling, shortening and
malformation of leaves, shortening of internodes and stems with overall
stunting of diseased plant (Fig 1).

Figure 1: Guar plant showing symptoms of leaf curl disease
Previous studies demonstrated the association of an unknown
begomovirus with this disease. The disease agent was whitefly (Bemisia
tabaci) transmitted from diseased to healthy guar plant (C.
tetragonoloba cv. RGC-936). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) could
amplify a ca. 578 base pairs (bp) DNA fragment from infected leaf
tissues employing begomovirus specific primers representing the core
region of the coat protein (CP) gene (Wyatt and Brown, 1996). In
addition, Southern hybridization, under high stringency conditions, gave
strong positive signals when hybridized to DNA probes prepared from the CP
gene of other begomoviruses (Khan et al., 2002). To establish the
identity of the unknown begomovirus, in present studies, the PCR
amplicon was cloned and sequenced. A BLAST search of the sequence
databases, revealed high nucleotide sequence identity (90% or more) with
the corresponding regions of the CP genes of Indian isolates of Tomato
leaf curl virus (ToLCV). It shared 95% sequence identity with
ToLCV-BanII (accession number U38239); 91% with ToLCV-BanI (accession
no. Z 48182), ToLCV-BaV (accession no. AF 295401) and ToLCV-Kolar
(accession no. AF 428255); 90% with ToLCV-BanIV (accession no. AF
165098). Interestingly, the level of sequence identity with isolates
from other Indian subcontinent countries was lower, being 84% with both
ToLCV from Bangladesh (accession no. AF 188481) and Sri Lanka (accession
no. AF 274349). This data indicates that the virus causing guar leaf
curl disease in India is caused by an Indian isolate of ToLCV. This is
the first report of ToLCV naturally infecting guar.
References
Khan JA, Sohrab SS, Aminuddin, Gupta RK, 2002. Detection of a
begomovirus affecting guar [Cyamopsis tetragonoloba (L.) Taub.]
in India. Journal of Plant Disease and Protection 109,
68-73.
Wyatt SD, Brown JK, 1996. Detection of subgroup III geminivirus
isolates in leaf extracts by degenerate primers and polymerase chain
reaction. Phytopathology 86, 1288-1293.
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