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Some biological and genomic properties of rice tungro bacilliform badnavirus and rice tungro spherical waikavirus from Nepal

Authors :
G. Dahal
A. Druka
L C Villegas
Ram B. Shrestha
Z. Fan
T M Burns
Roger Hull
Source :
Annals of Applied Biology. 129:267-287
Publication Year :
1996
Publisher :
Wiley, 1996.

Abstract

Summary. A survey of rice fields during the main growing seasons in 81 locations from 21 districts of the Southern Terai region of Nepal indicated that rice tungro was primarily restricted to the Hardinath (Janakpur) and Parwanipur (Bara) regions. The tungro incidence in Hardinath ranged from 17% to 51% and in Parwanipur from 6% to 61% causing about 89% grain yield loss in Hardinath. Both rice tungro bacilliform badnavirus (RTBV) and rice tungro spherical picornavirus (RTSV) were found in tungro isolates collected from Hardinath and Parwanipur. These isolates were transmitted by Nephotettix virescens and leaf extracts reacted to antisera against RTBV and RTSV. In a dot blot hybridisation assay, leaf extracts of 12 weed species collected from the tungro-affected area in Hardinath and Parwanipur also reacted with RTBV DNA probes. On mass inoculation of 15 popular rice cultivars most became more than 50% infected and only cv. Radha 9 had low (22.2%) infection. RTBV DNA and the coat protein region of RTSV from the Hardinath isolate were cloned and partially characterised. A comparative analyses by restriction endonuclease digestion, cross hybridisation, the polymerase chain reaction and partial sequencing indicated that the Nepalese RTBV DNA clone and the cDNA clones of the RTSV RNA were more similar to the various tungro isolates from the Indian subcontinent than to those from the Philippines.

Details

ISSN :
17447348 and 00034746
Volume :
129
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Applied Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........29cfbced443e8ad3fb1520b2ec0f1f0d