Sweet pepper confirmed as a reservoir host for tomato yellow leaf curl virus by both agro-inoculation and whitefly-mediated inoculation.

Eui Joon Kil, Hee Seong Byun, Sunhoo Kim, Jaedeok Kim, Jungan Park, Seungchan Cho, Dong Cheol Yang, Kyeong Yeoll Lee, Hong Soo Choi, Ji Kwang Kim, Sukchan Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Scopus citations

Abstract

Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV), a member of the genus Begomovirus, has a single-stranded DNA genome. TYLCV can induce severe disease symptoms on tomato plants, but other hosts plants such as cucurbits and peppers are asymptomatic. A full-length DNA clone of a Korean TYLCV isolate was constructed by rolling-circle amplification from TYLCV-infected tomatoes in Korea. To assess relative susceptibility of sweet pepper varieties to TYLCV, 19 cultivars were inoculated with cloned TYLCV by agro-inoculation. All TYLCV-infected sweet peppers were asymptomatic, even though Southern hybridization and polymerase chain reaction analysis showed TYLCV genomic DNA accumulation in roots, stems, and newly produced shoots. Southern hybridization indicated that TYLCV replicated and moved systemically from agro-inoculated apical shoot tips to roots or newly produced shoots of sweet peppers. Whitefly-mediated inoculation experiments showed that TYLCV can be transmitted to tomatoes from TYLCV-infected sweet peppers. Taken together, these results indicate that sweet pepper can be a reservoir for TYLCV in nature.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2387-2395
Number of pages9
JournalArchives of Virology
Volume159
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014

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