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Potyvirus Complexes in Sweetpotato: Occurrence in Australia, Serological and Molecular Resolution, and Analysis of the Sweet potato virus 2 (SPV2) Component

September 2006 , Volume 90 , Number  9
Pages  1,120 - 1,128

Fred Tairo , Department of Plant Biology and Forest Genetics, Box 7080, SLU, SE-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden, and Mikocheni Agriculture Research Institute, P.O. Box 6226, Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania ; Roger A. C. Jones , Agricultural Research Western Australia, Locked Bag No. 4, Bentley Delivery Centre, Perth, WA 6983, and School of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology, Murdoch University, Perth, WA 6150, Australia ; and Jari P. T. Valkonen , Department of Plant Biology and Forest Genetics, Box 7080, SLU, SE-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden, and Department of Applied Biology, P.O. Box 27, FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland



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Accepted for publication 4 April 2006.
ABSTRACT

A survey for viruses in sweetpotato revealed the presence of Sweet potato virus 2 (SPV2; synonymous to Sweet potato virus Y and Ipomoea vein mosaic virus), a tentative member of the genus Potyvirus, for the first time in Australia. The SPV2-infected sweetpotato plants were also infected with strains RC and/or C of Sweet potato feathery mottle virus (SPFMV; genus Potyvirus). Five SPV2 and SPFMV isolates from Australia were sequence-characterized at the 3′ - proximal end (ca. 1.8 kb) of the genome. A simple and sensitive diagnostic procedure was devised to readily differentiate SPV2 and the two strains of SPFMV from sweetpotato plants that contained these viruses in complexes. The method involved reverse transcription with oligoT25 primer, polymerase chain reaction using a combination of degenerate primers, and restriction analysis of the 1.8-kb amplification products with HindIII and PvuII endonucleases. The Nproximal 543 nucleotides of the SPV2 coat protein-encoding sequence of the Australian isolates and 14 other isolates from Asia, Africa, Europe, and North America were subjected to phylogenetic analysis. The Australian SPV2 isolates formed a separate clade that was closest to a clade containing two North American isolates.


Additional keywords: Ipomoea batatas, IVMV, plant virus, RFLP, RT-PCR, SPVY

© 2006 The American Phytopathological Society