Diversity and Global Distribution of Whitefly-Transmitted Geminiviruses of Cotton

Geminivirus diseases of cotton are on the rise, worldwide, yet few have been studied in adequate detail to permit the implementation of rational approaches to disease control. The rising costs of managing the whitefly vector, coupled with substantial losses caused by geminivirus-incited diseases now...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brown, J. K.
Other Authors: Silvertooth, Jeff
Language:en_US
Published: College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/210399
id ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-210399
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2103992015-10-23T04:50:02Z Diversity and Global Distribution of Whitefly-Transmitted Geminiviruses of Cotton Brown, J. K. Silvertooth, Jeff Department of Plant Sciences Agriculture -- Arizona Cotton -- Arizona Cotton -- Diseases Geminivirus diseases of cotton are on the rise, worldwide, yet few have been studied in adequate detail to permit the implementation of rational approaches to disease control. The rising costs of managing the whitefly vector, coupled with substantial losses caused by geminivirus-incited diseases now hinder cotton production by requiring inputs that are beyond economic feasibility. The need for geminivirus disease resistant cultivars in diverse cotton producting areas and against different viral genotypes presents a new challenge. To meet this need, information about the identity, distribution, and relevant biotic characteristics of cotton -infecting geminiviruses is needed This project addresses this problem through the molecular analysis of the genomes of cotton-infecting geminivirus from cotton throughout the world Here, sequence similarities of the coat protein gene and of the non-coding IR/CR involved in regulating virus replication and transcription were examined by comparative sequence analysis to achieve virus identification. This is the first effort to determine virus identity and to map the distribution of geminiviruses on a global basis. The outcome of this effort will be a data base containing biotic and molecular information that will permit rapid and accurate geminivirus identification, and the selection of relevant viral species for development of cotton cultivars with disease resistance to the geminiviruses specific to individual production areas. 1998-04 text Article http://hdl.handle.net/10150/210399 Cotton: A College of Agriculture Report en_US AZ1006 College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Agriculture -- Arizona
Cotton -- Arizona
Cotton -- Diseases
spellingShingle Agriculture -- Arizona
Cotton -- Arizona
Cotton -- Diseases
Brown, J. K.
Diversity and Global Distribution of Whitefly-Transmitted Geminiviruses of Cotton
description Geminivirus diseases of cotton are on the rise, worldwide, yet few have been studied in adequate detail to permit the implementation of rational approaches to disease control. The rising costs of managing the whitefly vector, coupled with substantial losses caused by geminivirus-incited diseases now hinder cotton production by requiring inputs that are beyond economic feasibility. The need for geminivirus disease resistant cultivars in diverse cotton producting areas and against different viral genotypes presents a new challenge. To meet this need, information about the identity, distribution, and relevant biotic characteristics of cotton -infecting geminiviruses is needed This project addresses this problem through the molecular analysis of the genomes of cotton-infecting geminivirus from cotton throughout the world Here, sequence similarities of the coat protein gene and of the non-coding IR/CR involved in regulating virus replication and transcription were examined by comparative sequence analysis to achieve virus identification. This is the first effort to determine virus identity and to map the distribution of geminiviruses on a global basis. The outcome of this effort will be a data base containing biotic and molecular information that will permit rapid and accurate geminivirus identification, and the selection of relevant viral species for development of cotton cultivars with disease resistance to the geminiviruses specific to individual production areas.
author2 Silvertooth, Jeff
author_facet Silvertooth, Jeff
Brown, J. K.
author Brown, J. K.
author_sort Brown, J. K.
title Diversity and Global Distribution of Whitefly-Transmitted Geminiviruses of Cotton
title_short Diversity and Global Distribution of Whitefly-Transmitted Geminiviruses of Cotton
title_full Diversity and Global Distribution of Whitefly-Transmitted Geminiviruses of Cotton
title_fullStr Diversity and Global Distribution of Whitefly-Transmitted Geminiviruses of Cotton
title_full_unstemmed Diversity and Global Distribution of Whitefly-Transmitted Geminiviruses of Cotton
title_sort diversity and global distribution of whitefly-transmitted geminiviruses of cotton
publisher College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
publishDate 1998
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/210399
work_keys_str_mv AT brownjk diversityandglobaldistributionofwhiteflytransmittedgeminivirusesofcotton
_version_ 1718100613010554880