Identification of Tomato mosaic virus Infection in Lisianthus in Taiwan

Plant Disease
F-J JanH T Hsu

Abstract

In recent years, Lisianthus (Eustoma russellianum (Don.) Griseb) has become popular as potted plants and cut flowers in Taiwan. They are grown in the central and southern regions of the island. Since 1998, diseased plants with mosaic symptoms, followed by necrosis of leaf tissues, were observed in commercial greenhouses and field-grown lisianthus. Newly emergent leaves were curled and smaller compared with those on healthy plants. These symptoms greatly decreased the commercial value of the crop. Rigid rods similar to tobamoviruses that measured 300 × 18 nm were found consistently associated with symptomatic plants. In July 2002, a virus culture was isolated from diseased lisianthus from Chiayi County, Taiwan and established and maintained in systemic hosts Nicotiana tabacum L. and N. benthamiana Domin. Chlorotic and necrotic spots developed on lisianthus leaves 1 to 2 weeks after inoculation with the virus; symptoms eventually became systemic. Virions were purified from inoculated N. tabacum. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis showed that the virus contained one 18-kDa (Mr) polypeptide. The virus reacted positively in agar gel double diffusion tests and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays with an...Continue Reading

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