Tomato chlorosis virus, a promiscuous virus with multiple host plants and whitefly vectors

被引:16
作者
Fiallo-Olive, Elvira [1 ]
Navas-Castillo, Jesus [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIC, Inst Hortofruticultura Subtrop & Mediterranea La, Ave Dr Wienberg S-N, Malaga 29750, Spain
关键词
Closteroviridae; criniviruses; emerging diseases; plant viruses; tomato; whiteflies; COMPLETE NUCLEOTIDE-SEQUENCE; TO-CELL MOVEMENT; LEAF-CURL-VIRUS; INFECTIOUS-YELLOWS-VIRUS; NATURAL WEED HOSTS; 1ST REPORT; GENETIC DIVERSITY; HSP70; HOMOLOG; PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS; GENOME ORGANIZATION;
D O I
10.1111/aab.12809
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
Tomato chlorosis virus (ToCV, genus Crinivirus, family Closteroviridae) is an emerging plant virus first identified in the mid-1990s affecting tomato in Florida. Today, the virus is present in at least 39 countries and territories around the world, and this number has not stopped growing. ToCV prevalence in tomato has been reported to frequently reach 100%, with a consequent loss in production. Although ToCV infects mainly tomato, it has been reported to infect a wide range of plants, both cultivated and wild, including many economically important crops, such as pepper and potato. To date, 119 species of host plants belonging to 28 families have been recorded. ToCV is transmitted in nature by whiteflies belonging to two genera, namely members of the Bemisia tabaci complex and Trialeurodes vaporariorum and Trialeurodes abutiloneus. This review summarises what is known about ToCV, an example of an emerging plant pathogen, and is the basis of the Association of Applied Biologists' Description of Plant Viruses for ToCV.
引用
收藏
页码:29 / 36
页数:8
相关论文
共 106 条
[61]   Foliar Spraying of Tomato Plants with Systemic Insecticides: Effects on Feeding Behavior, Mortality and Oviposition ofBemisia tabaci(Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) and Inoculation Efficiency of Tomato Chlorosis Virus [J].
Maluta, Nathalie Kristine Prado ;
Lopes, Joao Roberto Spotti ;
Fiallo-Olive, Elvira ;
Navas-Castillo, Jesus ;
Lourencao, Andre Luiz .
INSECTS, 2020, 11 (09) :1-14
[62]  
Mamoun Abdel-Salam Aly Mohamed, 2019, Pak J Biol Sci, V22, P83, DOI 10.3923/pjbs.2019.83.94
[63]   Screening tomato genotypes for resistance and tolerance to Tomato chlorosis virus [J].
Mansilla-Cordova, P. J. ;
Bampi, D. ;
Rondinel-Mendoza, N. V. ;
Melo, P. C. T. ;
Lourencao, A. L. ;
Rezende, J. A. M. .
PLANT PATHOLOGY, 2018, 67 (05) :1231-1237
[64]   First report of Tomato chlorosis virus infecting tomato in single and mixed infections with Tomato yellow leaf curl virus in Cuba [J].
Martinez-Zubiaur, Y. ;
Fiallo-Olive, E. ;
Carrillo-Tripp, J. ;
Rivera-Bustamante, R. .
PLANT DISEASE, 2008, 92 (05) :836-836
[65]   Tomato chlorosis virus:: first report in Mayotte Island [J].
Masse, D. ;
Lefeuvre, P. ;
Delatte, H. ;
Karime, A. L. Abdoul ;
Hostachy, B. ;
Reynaud, B. ;
Lett, J. M. .
PLANT PATHOLOGY, 2008, 57 (02) :388-388
[66]  
Mnari-Hattab M., 2014, New Disease Reports, V30, P3, DOI 10.5197/j.2044-0588.2014.030.003
[67]   Prevalence, epidemiology and molecular studies of Tomato chlorosis virus (ToCV) in South Africa [J].
Moodley, Vaneson ;
Gubba, Augustine ;
Mafongoya, Paramu L. .
PLOS ONE, 2019, 14 (07)
[68]   Interaction between HSP70 homolog and filamentous virions of the beet yellows virus [J].
Napuli, AJ ;
Falk, BW ;
Dolja, VV .
VIROLOGY, 2000, 274 (01) :232-239
[69]   Severe yellowing outbreaks in tomato in Spain associated with infections of Tomato chlorosis virus [J].
Navas-Castillo, J ;
Camero, R ;
Bueno, M ;
Moriones, E .
PLANT DISEASE, 2000, 84 (08) :835-837
[70]   Emerging Virus Diseases Transmitted by Whiteflies [J].
Navas-Castillo, Jesus ;
Fiallo-Olive, Elvira ;
Sanchez-Campos, Sonia .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF PHYTOPATHOLOGY, VOL 49, 2011, 49 :219-248