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Characterisation of Tomato fruit yellow ring virus: a new Tospovirus
species infecting tomato in Iran
S. Winter1*, N. Shahraeen2, M. Koerbler1 and D.-E.
Lesemann3
1 DSMZ Plant Virus Division, c/o BBA, Braunschweig, Germany
2 Plant Pests and Diseases Research Institute, Ministry of
Agriculture, Tehran, Iran
3 Institute of Plant Virology, Microbiology and Biosafety, BBA,
Braunschweig, Germany
*S.Winter@bba.de
Accepted for publication 19/04/05
During surveys for Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) in the
major tomato production areas of Iran, tomato fruits showing a bright
yellow ring pattern were observed, from which a tospovirus was isolated
by mechanical transmission to herbaceous hosts. The virus originated
from the Varamin area where >30% of the tomato crop was infected with
TSWV. Although typical tospovirus virions were found by electron
microscopy, a panel of antibodies used for detection and identification
of tospoviruses by ELISA failed to react with this isolate. An antiserum
against virus nucleoprotein preparations (DSMZ-AS0526) reacted
specifically with plants infected with the new isolate but not with
other tospoviruses.
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Figure 1: Typical fruit ring symptoms of TFYRV on tomato |
Figure 2: Phylogenetic tree obtained from Clustal W alignments of
tospovirus N-gene amino acid sequences |
Analysis of the S RNA genome comprising the N
protein gene (275 aa; GenBank accession AJ493270) and a segment of the L
Gene (GenBank accession AJ493271), to determine the taxonomic position
of the virus, confirmed that this is a distinct tospovirus species,
sharing 72-75% nucleoprotein aa identity with isolates of Iris yellow
spot virus (IYSV), it’s closest relative. A 42-45% N protein
similarity with N gene sequences of tospoviruses from Asia (Watermelon
silver mottle virus, Melon yellow spot virus and Watermelon
bud necrosis virus) and only 28-30% aa sequences in common with
tospoviruses from Europe-Africa (TSWV, Tomato chlorotic spot virus
and Groundnut ringspot virus), further confirmed it’s taxonomic
position.
The absence of any detectable serological relationships and the
limited sequence similarity with IYSV and other tospoviruses, justifies
the classification of this new virus as a distinct species of the genus Tospovirus
for which we propose the name Tomato fruit yellow ring virus (TFYRV).
This virus has an extensive host range (Ghotbi et al., 2005) but
it is found most often in tomato and in mixed virus infections with
TSWV.
References
Ghotbi T, Shahraeen N, Winter S, 2005. Occurrence of Tospoviruses in
Ornamental and Weed Species in Markazi and Tehran Provinces in Iran. Plant
Disease 89, 425-429.
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