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Occurrence and distribution of citrus leprosis virus (CiLV-C) in Honduras, Central America
First Report of
Honeysuckle
yellow vein mosaic virus
on tomato affected by yellow dwarf disease in Japan
K. Kitamura1,
T. Ogawa2, P. Sharma2, and M. Ikegami2*
1 Department
of Bioscience, Tokyo University of Agriculture, Tokyo 156-8502, Japan
2 Department of Life Science,
Graduate
School of Agricultural Science,
Tohoku
University, 1-1 Tsutsumidori-Aamamiyamachi,
Aoba-ku,
Sendai, Miyagi 981-8555,
Japan
*
ikegami@bios.tohoku.ac.jp
Accepted for publication 14/03/07
Tomato plants exhibiting typical yellow dwarf symptoms (Fig. 1) were collected
from three fields in Yanai-City, Yamaguchi-ken, Japan during 2000.

Figure 1:
Yellow dwarf diseased tomato collected in Yanai-city, Yamaguchi-ken, Japan
Total nucleic
acid was extracted from infected tomato leaves and PCR performed using
begomovirus-specific degenerate primers (Briddon
&
Markham, 1994). A PCR-amplified product of expected size (approximately 2.7kbp) was obtained,
cloned and sequenced. To sequence the remaining DNA region, additional
degenerate primers Japan-V (5’-CCTGTGGGTGAATCCATGRTT-3’) and Japan-C (5’-TCCRAACATTCAGGGAGCTAA-3’)
were designed and used for PCR. Wherever clones overlapped, their sequences were
identical.
We could not detect any DNA-B component in diseased plants using primers PCRc1
and PBLlv2040 (Rojas
et al., 1993).
The complete sequence of this begomovirus was determined as 2760 nucleotides and
was deposited in GenBank (Accession number AB079765). Comparison of this
sequence with those of other full length begomovirus DNAs in GenBank gave the
highest similarity (92%) to that of honeysuckle yellow vein mosaic virus (HYVMV)
(Accession No. AB020781). No DNA
β
was
detected by Southern hybridization using HYVMD DNAβ
as a
probe, strongly suggesting that this virus is a monopartite begomovirus and a
strain of HYVMV for which we propose the name
Honeysuckle yellow vein mosaic virus-[Yamaguchi]
(HYVMV-[Yam]). Tobacco
leaf curl
Japan virus
is normally regarded as the cause
of tomato yellow dwarf disease, causing heavy losses to tomato crops in Japan.
This is the first report of HYVMV associated with tomato yellow dwarf disease in
Japan.
References
Briddon RW, Markham PG,
1994. Universal primers for the PCR amplification of dicot-infecting
geminiviruses.
Molecular Biotechnology
1,
202–205.
Rojas MR, Gilbertson RL,
Russell DR, Maxwell DP, 1993. Use of degenerate primers in the polymerase chain
reaction to detect whitefly-transmitted geminiviruses. Plant Disease
77, 340-347.
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