Advanced search×

Cotton leaf curl disease in Sindh province of Pakistan is associated with recombinant begomovirus components

Virus Res 153(1):5 (2010) PMID 20621137

Cotton leaf curl disease (CLCuD) is a devastating disease of cotton causing severe losses to cotton across the Punjab province of Pakistan and northeastern India. Although the disease has been reported as occurring sporadically in Sindh province, Pakistan, this has not caused significant losses. However, in the last few years the disease has become more significant in Sindh province. CLCuD is caused by begomoviruses in association with a disease-specific symptom determining satellite (Cotton leaf curl Multan betasaellite [CLCuMB]) and, in some cases, a non-essential alphasatellite (the function of which remains unclear). These components were cloned from six samples collected in Sindh. Analysis of the full-length sequences of six begomovirus clones showed one to be an isolate of Cotton leaf curl Kokhran virus (CLCuKV), a virus previously shown to be associated with CLCuD in the Punjab, whereas the other five clones showed less than ~90% nucleotide sequence identity to several known begomoviruses associated with CLCuD. We take this to indicate that these are isolates of a newly identified begomovirus, for which we propose the name Cotton leaf curl Shahdadpur virus (CLCuShV). Closer inspection of the sequence of CLCuShV showed it to have a recombinant origin. For only two of the cotton samples was the presence of an alphasatellite detected. The sequences of clones of these alphasatellites indicate them to be newly identified species. A betasatellite was shown to be present in all six plants examined and sequence analysis of seven full-length clones indicated that two types of CLCuMB are present in Sindh and both are recombinant. These results indicate that the virus complex causing CLCuD in Sindh is distinct from that in the adjacent Punjab province. Possible reasons for these differences are discussed.

Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2010.07.003
Version: za2963e q8zab q8zb3 q8zc7 q8zdb q8ze4 q8zf2 q8zge

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. A high-throughput approach for studying virus replication in yeast.

    Curr Protoc Microbiol (2010) PMID 21053256

  2. Post-transcriptional gene silencing suppressor activity of two non-pathogenic alphasatellites associated with a begomovirus

    Virology 405(2):9 (2010) PMID 20598726

    We show that the replication-associated proteins (Rep: a rolling-circle replication initiator protein) encoded by these alphasatellites interact with the Rep and C4 proteins encoded by their helper begomovirus, Cotton leaf curl Rajasthan virus (CLCuRaV), in a yeast two-hybrid assay. Both the alphasa...
  3. Evolution of geminiviruses and their satellites

    FEBS Lett 583(12):8 (2009) PMID 19497325

    Geminiviruses and their satellites have circular single stranded DNA genomes, infecting many crops and weeds across the globe. To successfully invade new hosts, break host resistance, move virus particles within and between plants, geminiviruses and their satellites have evolved a co...