Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://digitalrepository.fccollege.edu.pk/handle/123456789/1306
Title: Identification of a novel circular single-stranded DNA associated with cotton leaf curl disease in Pakistan
Authors: Mansoor, S
Khan, S H
Bashir, Dr. Aftab
Saeed, M
Zafar, Y
Malik, Dr. Kauser .A.
Briddon, R
Stanley, J
Markham, P G
Keywords: DNA
cotton leaf
Issue Date: 20-Jun-1999
Publisher: Pubmed
Citation: Mansoor S, Khan SH, Bashir A, Saeed M, Zafar Y, Malik KA, Briddon R, Stanley J, Markham PG. Identification of a novel circular single-stranded DNA associated with cotton leaf curl disease in Pakistan. Virology. 1999 Jun 20;259(1):190-9. doi: 10.1006/viro.1999.9766. PMID: 10364503.
Series/Report no.: Virology . 1999 Jun 20;259(1):190-9.;
Abstract: Recent reports have suggested that cotton leaf curl virus (CLCuV), a geminivirus of the genus Begomovirus, may be responsible for cotton leaf curl disease in Pakistan. However, the causal agent of the disease remains unclear as CLCuV genomic components resembling begomovirus DNA A are unable to induce typical disease symptoms when reintroduced into plants. All attempts to isolate a genomic component equivalent to begomovirus DNA B have been unsuccessful. Here, we describe the isolation and characterisation of a novel circular single-stranded (ss) DNA associated with naturally infected cotton plants. In addition to a component resembling DNA A, purified geminate particles contain a smaller unrelated ssDNA that we refer to as DNA 1. DNA 1 was cloned from double-stranded replicative form of the viral DNA isolated from infected cotton plants. Blot hybridisation using probes specific for either CLCuV DNA or DNA 1 was used to demonstrate that both DNAs co-infect naturally infected cotton plants from different geographical locations. DNA 1 was detected in viruliferous Bemisia tabaci and in tobacco plants infected under laboratory conditions using B. tabaci, indicating that it is transmitted by whiteflies. Sequence analysis showed that DNA 1 is approximately half the size of CLCuV DNA but shares no homology, indicating that it is not a defective geminivirus component. DNA 1 has some homology to a genomic component of members of Nanoviridae, a family of DNA viruses that are normally transmitted by aphids or planthoppers. DNA 1 encodes a homologue of the nanovirus replication-associated protein (Rep) and has the capacity to autonomously replicate in tobacco. The data suggest that a nanovirus-like DNA has become whitefly-transmissible as a result of its association with a geminivirus and that cotton leaf curl disease may result from a mutually dependent relationship that has developed between members of two distinct DNA virus families that share a similar replication strategy. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.
Description: doi: 10.1006/viro.1999.9766.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/1306
Appears in Collections:School of Life Sciences



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