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Sérémé D., Lacombe Séverine, Konaté M., Pinel Galzi Agnès, Traoré V. S. E., Hébrard Eugénie, Traoré O., Brugidou Christophe, Fargette Denis, Konaté G. (2008). Biological and molecular characterization of a putative new sobemovirus infecting Imperata cylindrica and maize in Africa. Archives of Virology, 153 (10), p. 1813-1820. ISSN 0304-8608.

Titre du document
Biological and molecular characterization of a putative new sobemovirus infecting Imperata cylindrica and maize in Africa
Année de publication
2008
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000260249300003
Auteurs
Sérémé D., Lacombe Séverine, Konaté M., Pinel Galzi Agnès, Traoré V. S. E., Hébrard Eugénie, Traoré O., Brugidou Christophe, Fargette Denis, Konaté G.
Source
Archives of Virology, 2008, 153 (10), p. 1813-1820 ISSN 0304-8608
A new virus was isolated from both the grass Imperata cylindrica and maize plants that had yellow mottle symptoms in Burkina Faso, West Africa. The virus has isometric particles ca. 32 nm in diameter. The experimental host range was restricted to Rottboellia exaltata. Virions were isolated from leaves of systemically infected maize plants. Koch's postulates were completed by mechanically inoculating uninfected Imperata or maize with either purified virus or sap from infected Imperata plants. Virion preparations were used to produce a specific polyclonal antiserum, and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay test was set up. The full genome of the virus was sequenced, and it comprised 4,547 nucleotides. Phylogenetic studies indicated that the virus is closely related to rice yellow mottle virus, a sobemovirus that infects monocotyledons in Africa, and is more distantly related to cocksfoot mottle virus, another sobemovirus that infects monocotyledons. Although the virus can infect R. exaltata experimentally, it differs from Rottboellia yellow mottle virus, a member of a tentative species of the genus Sobemovirus that also infects monocotyledons in Africa. Particle morphology, serological properties, genomic organization, and phylogenetic analysis are all consistent with assignment of the new virus to the genus Sobemovirus. The name Imperata yellow mottle virus is proposed.
Plan de classement
Sciences du monde végétal [076]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010044053]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010044053
Contact