Host preference of the major strains of Plum pox virus —Opinions based on regional and world-wide sequence data

Plum pox virus (PPV) causes sharka — the most serious viral disease of stone fruit trees. PPV is wide spread in Europe and Mediterranean Basin, its incidence has been further approved in Asia and both Americas. Nine PPV strains have been recognized until now (PPV-D, PPV-M, PPV-Rec, PPV-EA, PPV-C, PP...

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Main Authors: Nina Sihelská, Miroslav Glasa, Zdeno W Šubr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-03-01
Series:Journal of Integrative Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095311916613564
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spelling doaj-42363ee0505942f09ed9543fc70624f62021-06-08T04:37:30ZengElsevierJournal of Integrative Agriculture2095-31192017-03-01163510515Host preference of the major strains of Plum pox virus —Opinions based on regional and world-wide sequence dataNina Sihelská0Miroslav Glasa1Zdeno W Šubr2Biomedical Research Center, Institute of Virology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava 84505, Slovak RepublicBiomedical Research Center, Institute of Virology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava 84505, Slovak RepublicCorrespondence Zdeno W Š; Biomedical Research Center, Institute of Virology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava 84505, Slovak RepublicPlum pox virus (PPV) causes sharka — the most serious viral disease of stone fruit trees. PPV is wide spread in Europe and Mediterranean Basin, its incidence has been further approved in Asia and both Americas. Nine PPV strains have been recognized until now (PPV-D, PPV-M, PPV-Rec, PPV-EA, PPV-C, PPV-T, PPV-W, PPV-CR, and PPV-An), forming molecularly distinct entities, however, only partially differentiable by their biological or epidemiological properties. The most strict virus-host linkages under natural conditions have been detected for strains naturally infecting cherries (PPV-C and PPV-CR). However, although less stringent but still clear host preference is observed also for three epidemiologically most important strains (PPV-D/plum/apricot, PPV-M/peach, and PPV-Rec/plum). So far no genetic marker has been mapped in the PPV genome, which responsibility for the host specificity/preference could be explicitly demonstrated. In this review, we focus on the host preference of three major PPV strains as evidenced by analysis of an extensive dataset of PPV isolates of Slovak and world-wide origin. Together, we discuss several performed relevant experiments and further possible research procedures aimed to better understand the genetic determinants and mechanisms of the host preference of this potyvirus.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095311916613564sharkaPrunusvirus-host interactions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nina Sihelská
Miroslav Glasa
Zdeno W Šubr
spellingShingle Nina Sihelská
Miroslav Glasa
Zdeno W Šubr
Host preference of the major strains of Plum pox virus —Opinions based on regional and world-wide sequence data
Journal of Integrative Agriculture
sharka
Prunus
virus-host interactions
author_facet Nina Sihelská
Miroslav Glasa
Zdeno W Šubr
author_sort Nina Sihelská
title Host preference of the major strains of Plum pox virus —Opinions based on regional and world-wide sequence data
title_short Host preference of the major strains of Plum pox virus —Opinions based on regional and world-wide sequence data
title_full Host preference of the major strains of Plum pox virus —Opinions based on regional and world-wide sequence data
title_fullStr Host preference of the major strains of Plum pox virus —Opinions based on regional and world-wide sequence data
title_full_unstemmed Host preference of the major strains of Plum pox virus —Opinions based on regional and world-wide sequence data
title_sort host preference of the major strains of plum pox virus —opinions based on regional and world-wide sequence data
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Integrative Agriculture
issn 2095-3119
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Plum pox virus (PPV) causes sharka — the most serious viral disease of stone fruit trees. PPV is wide spread in Europe and Mediterranean Basin, its incidence has been further approved in Asia and both Americas. Nine PPV strains have been recognized until now (PPV-D, PPV-M, PPV-Rec, PPV-EA, PPV-C, PPV-T, PPV-W, PPV-CR, and PPV-An), forming molecularly distinct entities, however, only partially differentiable by their biological or epidemiological properties. The most strict virus-host linkages under natural conditions have been detected for strains naturally infecting cherries (PPV-C and PPV-CR). However, although less stringent but still clear host preference is observed also for three epidemiologically most important strains (PPV-D/plum/apricot, PPV-M/peach, and PPV-Rec/plum). So far no genetic marker has been mapped in the PPV genome, which responsibility for the host specificity/preference could be explicitly demonstrated. In this review, we focus on the host preference of three major PPV strains as evidenced by analysis of an extensive dataset of PPV isolates of Slovak and world-wide origin. Together, we discuss several performed relevant experiments and further possible research procedures aimed to better understand the genetic determinants and mechanisms of the host preference of this potyvirus.
topic sharka
Prunus
virus-host interactions
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095311916613564
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