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First Report of Beet virus Q on Sugar Beet in Iran. Sh. Farzadfar
and R. Pourrahim, Department of Plant Virology, Plant Pests and Diseases
Research Institute, P.O. Box 19395-1454, Tehran, Iran; A. R. Golnaraghi,
Department of Plant Protection, Science and Research Campus, Islamic Azad
University, P.O. Box 14515-775, Tehran, Iran; and A. Ahoonmanesh, Department of
Plant Pathology, Esfahan University of Technology, Esfahan, Iran. Plant Dis.
89:1359, 2005; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-89-1359B. Accepted for
publication 6 September 2005.
During the 2001 growing season, a survey was conducted to determine the
incidence of Beet necrotic yellow vein virus (BNYVV), Beet soilborne
virus (BSBV), and Beet virus Q (BVQ) in Iran. A total of 2,816 random
and 76 samples with rhizomania were collected from 131 fields in the main sugar
beet cultivation areas of 13 provinces in Iran. All samples were tested using a
tissue-blot immunoassay (TBIA) with commercial BNYVV (As-0799.1/CG6-F4), BSBV
(As-0576.1), and BSBV/BVQ (As-0576.2) antisera provided by S. Winter (DSMZ,
Braunschweig, Germany). For randomly collected samples, the highest incidence of
virus infection was found for BNYVV (52.3%), followed by BSBV (9.5%) and BVQ
(1.5%). Co-infection of BNYVV with BSBV or BVQ was 6.6% and 0.9%, respectively.
Infection with both BSBV and BVQ was found in 16 (0.6%) samples. In addition,
0.4% (12) of the samples was infected with all three viruses. Our results
indicated the presence of BVQ in samples from 10 fields located in
Azarbayejan-e-gharbi, Esfahan, Fars, Kermanshah, Khorasan, Lorestan, and Semnan
provinces of Iran, with or without rhizomania-like symptoms. The presence of
viruses was confirmed using reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction
(RT-PCR) of RNA from 81, 19, and 14 root samples with positive reaction in TBIA
to BNYVV, BSBV, and BVQ, respectively, with previously described primers (3,4).
The primers specifically amplified fragments of 501 bp, 602 bp, 399 bp, and 291
bp of the BNYVV RNAs 1 and 4, BSBV RNA-2, and BVQ RNA-1, respectively. Our
results indicated that the samples tested were also positive using RT-PCR. The
putative vector for BNYVV, BSBV, and BVQ, Polymyxa betae, was also
detected in 161 samples (from 127 fields) by amplification of a 170-bp fragment
of the P. betae repetitive EcoRI-like fragments using previously
described primers (4). RT-PCR products from 72 BNYVV-positive sugar beet root
samples from 58 fields that also gave positive reactions in TBIA were analyzed
using single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) as previously described
with extracts from root beards of the susceptible sugar beet cvs. OPUS and IC1
grown in the soils infested with BNYVV types A and B (provided by A. Meunier,
Unite de Phytopathologie-UCL-AGRO-BAPA, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium) as positive
controls (3). The patterns obtained with SSCP were uniform and showed widespread
occurrence of BNYVV type A in almost all provinces surveyed. The fragments
obtained for BNYVV RNAs 1 and 4 of an isolate from Qazvin (BNQ1) were sequenced
(GenBank Accession Nos. AY703452 and AY703455) and compared with other sequences
available in GenBank using Clustal W, which revealed 99.3 and 99.6% identity
with the Japanese S (D84410) and Italian type A (AF197552) isolates,
respectively. The economic importance of BVQ and its interactions with other
sugar beet soilborne viruses remains a matter of debate. BNYVV and BSBV have
been previously reported from Iran (1,2). To our knowledge, this is the first
report of the natural occurrence of BVQ in sugar beets in Iran.
References: (1) Sh. Farzadfar et al. Plant Dis. 86:187, 2002. (2) K.
Izadpanah et al. Iran. J. Plant Pathol. 32:155, 1996. (3) R. Koenig et al. J.
Gen. Virol. 76:2051, 1995. (4) A. Meunier et al. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
69:2356, 2003.
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