Data di Pubblicazione:
2021
Abstract:
Seed transmission is an important factor in the epidemiology of plant pathogens. Geminiviruses
are serious pests spread in tropical and subtropical regions. They are transmitted by
hemipteran insects, but a few cases of transmission through seeds were recently reported. Here,
we investigated the tomato seed transmissibility of the begomovirus tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia
virus (TYLCSV), one of the agents inducing the tomato yellow leaf curl disease, heavily affecting
tomato crops in the Mediterranean area. None of the 180 seedlings originating from TYLCSV-infected
plants showed any phenotypic alteration typical of virus infection. Moreover, whole viral genomic
molecules could not be detected in their cotyledons and true leaves, neither by membrane hybridization
nor by rolling-circle amplification followed by PCR, indicating that TYLCSV is not a
seed-transmissible pathogen for tomato. Examining the localization of TYLCSV DNA in progenitor
plants, we detected the virus genome by PCR in all vegetative and reproductive tissues, but viral
genomic and replicative forms were found only in leaves, flowers and fruit flesh, not in seeds and
embryos. Closer investigations allowed us to discover for the first time that these embryos were
superficially contaminated by TYLCSV DNA but whole genomic molecules were not detectable.
Therefore, the inability of TYLCSV genomic molecules to colonize tomato embryos during infection
justifies the lack of seed transmissibility observed in this host.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
seed transmission; geminiviruses; reproductive tissue; tomato; embryos
Elenco autori:
Accotto, GIAN PAOLO; Noris, Emanuela; Miozzi, Laura; Matic, Slavica
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