Occurrence of Cotton leaf curl Multan virus and associated betasatellites with leaf curl disease of Bhut-Jolokia chillies (Capsicum chinense Jacq.) in India

被引:0
作者
Sneha Yogindran
Manish Kumar
Lingaraj Sahoo
Keithellakpam Sanatombi
Supriya Chakraborty
机构
[1] Jawaharlal Nehru University,Molecular Virology Laboratory, School of Life Sciences
[2] Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati,Department of Bioscience & Bioengineering
[3] Manipur University,Department of Biotechnology
来源
Molecular Biology Reports | 2021年 / 48卷
关键词
Geminivirus; Chilli (Bhut-Jolokia); Leaf curl disease; Cotton leaf curl multan virus; Betasatellite; Recombination; Host-range expansion; Phylogenetic relatedness;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Geminiviridae comprises the largest family of plant viruses which causes severe crop losses in India. The highest pungency chilli Bhut-Jolokia or ghost pepper (Capsicum chinense Jaqc.) hails from North-East region of India and is used in many dishes to add flavors and also for its medicinal value. However, this chilli variety is also affected by viruses leading to crop and economic losses. The present study reports the identification of begomoviruses in the infected chilli Bhut-Jolokia leaf samples collected from eight different places of North-East region (Manipur) of India. The infected leaf samples were screened for the presence of viral genome by rolling circle amplification (RCA) followed by PCR using degenerate primer pairs. The subsequent analyses using restriction fragment length polymorphism and sequencing revealed the presence of Cotton leaf curl Multan virus (CLCuMuV), and Tomato leaf curl Patna betasatellite (ToLCPaB). The findings focus on the phylogenetic relatedness, probable recombinational hot-spots and evolutionary divergence of the viral DNA sequences with the current reported begomoviral genome. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report showing the presence of CLCuMuV, and associated non-cognate ToLCPaB with leaf curl disease of Bhut-Jolokia chillies. The study reveals potential recombination sites on both viral genome and betsatellite which, during the course of evolution, may have aided the virus to progress and successfully establish infection in chilli plants. Taken together, our results suggest a possible spread of CLCuMuV to the hitherto non-host crop in the North-East region of India.
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页码:2143 / 2152
页数:9
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