Molecular characterization of ageratum enation virus and DNA-satellites associated with yellowing and leaf curl symptoms on mulberry in Pakistan

Abstract

<p>The whitefly-transmitted begomoviruses (family <i>Geminiviridae</i>) infect dicotyledonous plants and occur in tropical and sub-tropical regions. Although most commonly found in herbaceous plants, recently begomoviruses have increasingly been identified in woody plants. Leaf samples from five mulberry (<i>Morus alba</i> L.) plants with leaf yellowing and curling symptoms were collected in Lahore (Pakistan) and shown by PCR to be associated with a begomovirus, an alphasatellite and a betasatellite. The complete sequences of two begomovirus clones, as well as an alphasatellite clone and a betasatellite clone, were determined. The begomovirus clones were shown to be isolates of ageratum enation virus (AEV), a virus most commonly identified in weeds but increasingly being identified in crops such as tomato, soybean and fenugreek. Analyses of the sequences of the alphasatellite and betasatellite clones showed them to be isolates of Guar leaf curl alphasatellite and Papaya leaf curl betasatellite, respectively. Both the virus and the alphasatellite sequences showed evidence of a recombination. This is the first report of the weed-infecting monopartite begomovirus AEV, and associated satellites, infecting the woody plant mulberry.</p

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