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Basella rugose mosaic virus, a new potyvirus
infecting Basella rubra
C.-H. Huang, and Y.-C. Chang*
Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology, National
Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan 10617, Republic of China
*ycchang@ntu.edu.tw
Accepted for publication 20/03/06
Basella rubra and B. alba (Malabar spinach) are
plants of the family Basellaceae, native to tropical
Asia. They were introduced into Taiwan during the 1660s and are
grown as vegetables and herbs. In 2001, mosaic and rugose
symptoms were observed on leaves of B. rubra in the
Taipei area (Fig. 1).

Figure 1: Basella rubra plant infected by BaRMV
showing mosaic and rugose symptoms
Extracts from these plants caused chlorotic lesions on
inoculated leaves of Chenopodium amaranticolor and C.
quinoa; the latter became systemically infected. A virus
isolate, BR, was obtained after three successive single lesion
isolations from C. amaranticolor. Following mechanical
inoculation B. rubra and B. alba seedlings
produced symptoms similar to field diseased plants and Nicotiana
benthamiana and N. clevelandii displayed mosaic
symptoms. Transmission electron microscopy of negatively-stained
sap extracts showed the presence of flexuous filaments c.680
nm in length. Using indirect ELISA, plants of B. rubra
and C. quinoa with symptoms tested positive for potyvirus
using an anti-potyvirus group monoclonal antibody (Agdia Inc.,
Elkhart, IN, USA). The only potyvirus previously reported to
infect a member of the Basellaceae (Ullucus tuberosus)
is Ullucus mosaic virus (Brunt et al., 1982). However
this virus differs from isolate BR, as it causes local lesions
in C. quinoa. The 3'-terminal region of the BR isolate
was amplified by RT-PCR from total RNA of diseased plants, using
a potyvirus-specific degenerate primer (PNIbF1) and an oligo-dT
primer (Huang & Chang, 2005). A 1.8 kb fragment, including
partial NIb, the CP and 3’ UTR, was obtained and cloned. Two
independent clones were sequenced and a BLAST search was
performed against the NCBI database. Sequence analysis of the
putative capsid protein gene revealed that the highest amino
acid and nucleotide sequence identities were 70% and 68%
respectively, between the BR isolate (DQ394891) and all other
searched potyvirus sequences. According to the species
demarcation criteria for the Potyviridae (Adams et al.,
2005) the BR isolate is a new potyvirus and is herein designated
as Basella rugose mosaic virus (BaRMV).
References
Adams MJ, Antoniw JF, Fauquet CM. 2005. Molecular criteria
for genus and species discrimination within the family Potyviridae.
Archives of Virology 150, 459-479
Brunt AA, Phillips S, Jones RAC, Kenten RH, 1982. Viruses
detected in Ullucus tuberosus (Basellaceae) from Peru and
Bolivia. Annals of Applied Biology 101, 65-71.
Huang CH, Chang YC, 2005. Identification and molecular
characterization of Zantedeschia mild mosaic virus, a new calla
lily-infecting potyvirus. Archives of Virology 150,
1221-30.
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