Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (March 2015) |
Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus | |
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File:DOI.10.5772.F3.png | |
Electron micrograph of CGMMV virions and localization in cucurbit seeds | |
Virus classification Edit this classification | |
(unranked): | Virus |
Realm: | Riboviria |
Kingdom: | Orthornavirae |
Phylum: | Kitrinoviricota |
Class: | Alsuviricetes |
Order: | Martellivirales |
Family: | Virgaviridae |
Genus: | Tobamovirus |
Species: | Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus
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Synonyms | |
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Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus (CGMMV) is a plant pathogenic virus. In Europe this virus disease is found since 1935. Watermelon and melon are also susceptible to this virus.
Symptoms
The virus affects the young leaves with green and light green spots, even yellow-green spots. These spots have a slower development rate than the rest of the leaf. Sometimes the veins remain green. In heavy infection young leaves are even deformed. The activity of the virus is reduced when the leaf ages. Fruit drop (abortion) is common. The rest of the fruits are small. Yield is reduced by 25% even more if no control action are taken into account. In the epidermis of the sick plants characteristic structures can be seen easily with a microscope. Virus ID: Tobamovirus group. Temperature inactivation in juice 90 °C Transition: seed 8–10% from the beginning which is enough to star the silent infection. Aphids and other sucking insects do not transmit the virus. In hydroponic the virus could spread out to up to 80% of the crop because the roots are touching.
Transmission
Whether CGMMV is transmitted by pollen and pollinators is an important open question as of 2017[update].[1] Liu et al., 2014 demonstrate simulated pollination does transmit vertically to the seed however this does not distinguish between mechanical transmission by the simulated pollination equipment and true vertical transmission within the pollen.[1] A fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) study performed by Shargil et al., 2015 does show CGMMV in the pollen sac but finds none in the pollen itself.[1] Further research is needed to determine the precise route(s) of transmission.[1]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Dombrovsky, Aviv; Tran-Nguyen, Lucy T.T.; Jones, Roger A.C. (2017-08-04). "Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus: Rapidly Increasing Global Distribution, Etiology, Epidemiology, and Management". Annual Review of Phytopathology. 55 (1). Annual Reviews: 231–256. doi:10.1146/annurev-phyto-080516-035349. ISSN 0066-4286. PMID 28590876. S2CID 1698268.
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