First Report of Orchid fleck virus in Costa Rica

Plant Disease
J Freitas-AstuaE W Kitajima

Abstract

Orchid fleck virus (OFV), a tentative member of the family Rhabdoviridae, infects orchids in several countries. The virus is vectored worldwide by the mite Brevipalpus californicus (Banks) (Acari: Tenuipalpidae). Eleven plants of Oncidium spp. and one plant each of the genera Cymbidium and Maxillaria exhibiting numerous yellow flecks and necrotic ringspot lesions on leaves were collected in two private orchid collections in Costa Rica. Presence of OFV was assessed by plate-trapped antigen enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (PTA-ELISA) using an antiserum developed against an OFV isolate in Japan (2), analyses of ultrathin sections of the host cell with transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) amplification using specific primers for the viral nucleocapsid gene (1). Eight of eleven Oncidium samples, and both Cymbidium and Maxillaria samples tested positive for OFV with PTA-ELISA having A405 values ranging from 3.9 to 14.6 times higher than negative controls. Thin sections from individual samples of Cymbidium, Oncidium, and Maxillaria revealed electron-lucent intranuclear viroplasm and short, rodlike particles (40 to 50 × 100 nm) in the nucleus or cytoplasm typical of OFV-...Continue Reading

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