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A severe outbreak of melon yellow mosaic disease
caused by Zucchini yellow mosaic virus in the Punjab province of
Pakistan
A.H. Malik, S. Mansoor*, S. Iram, R.W. Briddon and Y. Zafar
National Institute for Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering,
Jhang Road, Faisalabad, Pakistan
*smansoor@nibge.org
Accepted for publication 03/05/05
In 2003 a serious disease of muskmelon (Cucumis melo) appeared
in commercial fields in the Punjab, Pakistan. Symptoms of the disease
were characteristically chlorosis, leaf curling and deformation, vein
clearing and the formation of leaf-like outgrowths on the upper leaf
surface of some leaves (Fig. 1). The disease led to almost 100% loss of
the crop in some areas and was present again in 2004, with a similar
phenotype and losses.
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Figure 1: Leaves of melon affected by
leaf curl disease |
Figure 2: Fields of melon in the vicinity
of Multan (Punjab) severely affected by the disease. |
To identify the virus(es) associated with the disease, infected plant
samples were collected from several locations in the Punjab Province. On
the basis of symptoms and host cucurbit-infecting viruses were
suspected. Samples were screened for the presence of Zucchini yellow
mosaic virus (ZYMV; Desbiez & Lecoq, 1997) and Cucumber
mosaic virus (CMV) by DAS-ELISA using virus specific polyclonal
antisera (Loewe, Germany). DAS-ELISA showed the presence of ZYMV in all
symptomatic samples collected from the epidemic area. For samples
collected in the Punjab, CMV was detected at a low incidence in tomato
plants with symptoms of yellow chlorosis growing near the melon fields,
but not in melon. Healthy indicator plants (melon, cucumber and Nicotiana
benthamiana) were mechanically inoculated with plant sap extracted
from symptomatic melon leaves by the leaf abrasion method. The virus was
mechanically transmitted from the infected samples to healthy melon
seedlings and induced symptoms, including the leaf-like outgrowths on
the upper leaf surface; typical of ZYMV infection. No infection was
observed in N. benthamiana, which is a diagnostic host for the
other common cucurbit potyvirus Watermelon mosaic virus. This
confirms that ZYMV is the causative agent of the disease of melon.
Although ZYMV has been reported from Pakistan on some cucurbits, with
an incidence of about 15% on samples collected from the North West
Frontier Province (Ali et al., 2004), we could not find a report
of the virus infecting melons. Moreover, the enation-like phenotype was
observed for the first time and on a large scale in Pakistan, although
this phenotype is known to be caused by ZYMV in other parts of the
world. We are currently investigating ZYMV-encoded genes causing this
phenotype.
References
Desbiez C, Lecoq H, 1997. Zucchini yellow mosaic virus. Plant
Pathology 46, 809-829.
Ali A, Natsuaki T, Okuda S, 2004. Identification and molecular
characterization of viruses infecting cucurbits in Pakistan. Journal
of Phytopathology 152, 677-682.
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