Triticum mosaic virus: A new virus isolated from wheat in Kansas

Citation

Seifers, D.L., Martin, T.J., Harvey, T.L., Fellers, J.P., Stack, J.P., Ryba-White, M., Haber, S., Krokhin, O., Spicer, V., Lovat, N., Yamchuk, A., Standing, K.G. (2008). Triticum mosaic virus: A new virus isolated from wheat in Kansas. Plant Disease, [online] 92(5), 808-817. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-92-5-0808

Abstract

In 2006, a mechanically-transmissible and previously uncharacterized virus was isolated in Kansas from wheat plants with mosaic symptoms. The physiochemical properties of the virus were examined by purification on cesium chloride density gradients, electron microscopy, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), sequencing of the nucleotides and amino acids of the coat protein, and immunological reactivity. Purified preparations contained flexuous, rod-shaped particles that resembled potyviruses. The coat protein was estimated from SDS-PAGE to have a mass of approximately 35 kDa. Its amino acid sequence, as deduced from DNA sequencing of cloned, reverse-transcribed viral RNA and separately determined by time-of-flight mass spectrometry, was most closely related (49% similarity) to Sugarcane streak mosaic virus, a member of the Tritimovirus genus of the family Potyviridae. The virus gave strong positive reactions during enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays using polyclonal antibodies raised against purified preparations of the cognate virus but gave consistent negative reactions against antibodies to Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV), other wheat potyviruses, and the High Plains virus. When the virus was inoculated on the WSMV-resistant wheat cv. RonL, systemic symptoms appeared and plant growth was diminished significantly in contrast with WSMV-inoculated RonL. Taken together, the data support consideration of this virus as a new potyvirus, and the name Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) is proposed. © 2008 The American Phytopathological Society.

Publication date

2008-05-01