Seed transmission of Sweet potato leaf curl virus in sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) |
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Authors: | J. Kim E.‐J. Kil S. Kim H. Seo H.‐S. Byun J. Park M.‐N. Chung H.‐R. Kwak M.‐K. Kim C.‐S. Kim J.‐W. Yang K.‐Y. Lee H.‐S. Choi S. Lee |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Genetic Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, Korea;2. Plant Quarantine Technology Center, Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency, Suwon, Korea;3. Bioenergy Crop Research Center, National Institute of Crop Science, RDA, Muan, Korea;4. Crop Protection Division, National Institute of Agricultural Science, RDA, Wanju, Korea;5. Institute of Plant Medicine, Kyungpook National University, Daegu, Korea |
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Abstract: | Sweet potato leaf curl virus (SPLCV) infects sweet potato and is a member of the family Geminiviridae (genus Begomovirus). SPLCV transmission occurs from plant to plant mostly via vegetative propagation as well as by the insect vector Bemisia tabaci. When sweet potato seeds were planted and cultivated in a whitefly‐free greenhouse, some sweet potato plants started to show SPLCV‐specific symptoms. SPLCV was detected by PCR from all leaves and floral tissues that showed leaf curl disease symptoms. More than 70% of the seeds harvested from SPLCV‐infected sweet potato plants tested positive for SPLCV. SPLCV was also identified from dissected endosperm and embryos. The transmission level of SPLCV from seeds to seedlings was up to 15%. Southern blot hybridization showed SPLCV‐specific single‐ and double‐stranded DNAs in seedlings germinated from SPLCV‐infected seeds. Taken altogether, the results show that SPLCV in plants of the tested sweet potato cultivars can be transmitted via seeds and SPLCV DNA can replicate in developing seedlings. This is the first seed transmission report of SPLCV in sweet potato plants and also, to the authors' knowledge, the first report of seed transmission for any geminivirus. |
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Keywords: | begomovirus
Bemisia tabaci
seed transmission sweet potato
Sweet potato leaf curl virus
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