Symptoms, aetiology and serological analysis of sweet potato virus disease in Uganda

被引:130
作者
Gibson, RW
Mpembe, I
Alicai, T
Carey, EE
Mwanga, ROM
Seal, SE
Vetten, HJ
机构
[1] Univ Greenwich, NRI, Chatham Maritime ME4 4TB, Kent, England
[2] Namulonge Agr & Anim Prod Res Inst, Kampala, Uganda
[3] Reg Off SubSaharan Africa, CIP, Nairobi, Kenya
[4] N Carolina State Univ, Dept Hort Sci, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA
[5] Biol Bundesanstalt Land & Forstwirtschaft, Inst Biochem & Pflanzenvirol, D-38104 Braunschweig, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1046/j.1365-3059.1998.00196.x
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
Sweet potato virus disease (SPVD) is the name used to describe a range of severe symptoms in different cultivars of sweet potato, comprising overall plant stunting combined with leaf narrowing and distortion, and chlorosis, mosaic or vein-clearing. Affected plants of various cultivars were collected from several regions of Uganda. All samples contained the aphid-borne sweet potato feathery mottle potyvirus (SPFMV) and almost all contained the whitefly-borne sweet potato chlorotic stunt closterovirus (SPCSV). SPCSV was detected by a mix of monoclonal antibodies (MAb) previously shown to react only to a Kenyan isolate of SPCSV, but not by a mixture of MAb that detected SPCSV isolates from Nigeria and other countries. Sweet potato chlorotic fleck virus (SPCFV) and sweet potato mild mottle ipomovirus (SPMMV) were seldom detected in SPVD-affected plants, while sweet potato latent virus (SPLV) was never detected. Isolates of SPFMV and SPCSV obtained by insect transmissions together induced typical symptoms of SPVD when graft-inoculated to virus-free sweet potato. SPCSV alone caused stunting and either purpling or yellowing of middle and lower leaves when graft-inoculated to virus-free plants of two cultivars. Similarly diseased naturally inoculated field plants were shown consistently to contain SPCSV. Both this disease and SPVD spread rapidly in a sweet potato crop.
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页码:95 / 102
页数:8
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