INVESTIGADORES
PEROTTO Maria Cecilia
artículos
Título:
First Report of Zucchini lethal chlorosis virus in Argentina Infecting Squash Crops
Autor/es:
POZZI E. A.; LUCIANI C. E.; CELLI M G; CONCI V. C.; PEROTTO M C
Revista:
PLANT DISEASE
Editorial:
AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
Referencias:
Año: 2020
ISSN:
0191-2917
Resumen:
Virus species of the genus Orthotospovirus are among the most economically important plant pathogens in the world because they cause severe crop losses, mainly in ornamental and horticultural crops (Pappu et al. 2009). They are exclusively transmitted by thrips. Several species of Orthotospovirus have been reported infecting cucurbits: watermelon silver mottle virus, zucchini lethal chlorosis virus (ZLCV), watermelon bud necrosis virus, melon yellow spot virus, melon severe mosaic virus, and groundnut ringspot virus (Ciuffo et al. 2017; Spadotti et al. 2014). The symptoms caused by ZLCV infection can include chlorosis and systemic necrosis on leaves, apical upward leaf curl, reduction of leaf blade, and fruit malformation (Giampan et al. 2007). The collection of 90 symptomatic leaves of squash from Salta and Jujuy provinces was carried out during early 2016. For an initial assessment of the presence of ZLCV, a plate trapped antibody enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Lommel et al. 1982) with antiserum against ZLCV, kindly provided by Jorge A. M. Rezende from the Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil, was performed. Fifty-four of the 90 samples reacted positively to ZLCV-specific antiserum: 18 and 11 positive plants of Cucurbita maxima var. zapallito redondo del tronco and var. zapallo plomo, respectively, 11 positive plants of C. pepo, 11 positive plants of C. ficifolia var. ?cayote?, and three positive plants of C. moschata. Ultrathin sections of leaf samples of naturally infected plants were examined by transmission electron microscopy, and presumable orthotospovirus particles were observed. To confirm the identity of the virus, a one-step reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay was carried out on the RNA extracts from squash plants, using ZLCV-specific primers designed to direct amplification of nucleotides (ZLCV-F, ATCATGCTGTCCAGTCTCCT; and ZLCV-R, CCCACATTTTGCACTTGCGA) of the nucleocapsid gene region. The RT-PCR reaction for ZLCV detection consisted of reverse transcription at 46°C for 30 min, followed by denaturation at 94°C for 3 min, and 35 cycles of denaturation at 94°C for 30 s, annealing at 55°C for 45 s, and extension at 72°C for 45 s. Amplicons of the two ZLCV isolates (MK680830 and MK680831) were Sanger sequenced. The consensus sequences were aligned using clustalW and compared with other ZLCV sequences in the public domain using Mega 7 (Kumar et al. 2016). Alignments of the N gene sequences of these ZLCV isolates displayed nucleotide sequence identity above 94% with other ZLCV isolates available at the GenBank database. In addition, the amino acid sequence demonstrated above 97% identity with equivalent regions of S segment of Brazilian ZLCV isolate from Cucumis sativus and squash. The phylogenetic analysis of the identified sequence of ZLCV and other related sequences from GenBank showed a cluster of Argentine isolates close to ZLCV-DF isolate obtained from C. sativus (KU681011). This is the first report of ZLCV outside of Brazil. Although we have not observed the presence of Frankliniella zucchini in the field, which was identified and described as the vector of ZLCV (Riley et al. 2011), as well as virus distribution being limited to Brazil (Nakahara and Monteiro 1999), it would be important to consider the presumable entry of F. zucchini into Argentina.