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Molecular Characterization of a Begomovirus Associated with Tomato Leaf Curl
Disease in Uganda. S. L. Shih, S. K. Green, and W. S. Tsai, AVRDC, The World
Vegetable Center, Shanhua, Tainan 741, Taiwan, Republic of China; C. Ssekyewa,
Faculty of Agriculture, Uganda Martyrs University, P.O. Box 5498, Kampala,
Uganda. Plant Dis. 90:246, 2006; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0246A.
Accepted for publication 5 November 2005.
During the summer of 2003, leaf curl symptoms were observed in tomato (Lycopersicon
esculentum) plantings in the Iganga District of Uganda. Begomoviral
infection was suspected. Twelve symptomatic samples were collected. Begomoviral
DNA was extracted and amplified using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with the
begomovirus-specific degenerate primer pair PAL1v1978/PAR1c715 (4). The
expected 1.4-kb PCR products were obtained from 11 of 12 samples. The 1.4-kb PCR
product of one of the samples was cloned and sequenced. Based on the sequence of
the 1.4-kb DNA product, specific primers were designed to complete the DNA-A
sequence. The DNA-A consisted of 2,747 nucleotides (GenBank Accession No.
DQ127170) and was found to contain seven predicted open reading frames (ORFs V1,
V2, C1, C2, C3, C4, and C5). A BLAST analysis was conducted with geminivirus
sequences available in the GenBank database at the National Center for
Biotechnology Information (Bethesda, MD), and MegAlign (DNASTAR, Inc, Madison,
WI) software was used for further comparisons. The DNA-A sequence of the virus
associated with leaf curl of tomato from Uganda showed less than 79% sequence
identity with cassava mosaic viruses from Uganda (GenBank/EMBL Accession Nos.
AF126800, AF126802, AF126804, AF126806, and Z83257), the only begomoviruses from
the country so far in the public domain. Highest sequence identity (83%) was
with Tomato leaf curl Mayotte virus from Dembeni, Mayotte, Comoros
Islands (ToLCYTV-[Dem], EMBL Accession No. AJ865341). Pairwise
comparison with ToLCYTV-[Dem] showed 60, 88, 91, 82, 84, 86, and 80% sequence
identities in the intergenic region, V2, V1, C1, C2, C3, and C4 ORFs,
respectively. Only low sequence identities (ranging from 71 to 82%) were
obtained with other tomato begomoviruses reported from Africa (GenBank/EMBL
Accession Nos. AF261885, AJ865337-AJ865340, AY044137-AY044139, AY502934,
AY502936, AY594174, AY736854, and U73498). There was no evidence for the
presence of DNA-B or DNA-beta using PCR with the DNA-B specific primer pairs
DNABLC1/DNABLV2 and DNABLC2/DNABLV2 (2) and the DNA-beta primer pair
Beta01/Beta02 (1), respectively. Detection of possible recombination was by
RDP2 software (3) using DNA-A sequences of begomoviruses from Uganda and tomato
begomoviruses from Africa. The DNA-A was found to contain a small recombinant
fragment from ToLCYTV-[Dem] in the 411 to 969 nucleotide position with 92%
sequence identity. Based on DNA-A sequence comparisons, the tomato leaf curl
virus from Uganda most likely constitutes a distinct new begomovirus.
References: (1) R. W. Briddon et al. Mol. Biotechnol. 20:315, 2002. (2)
S. K. Green et al. Plant Dis. 85:1286, 2001. (3) D. P. Martin et al.
Bioinformatics 21:260, 2005. (4) M. R. Rojas et al. Plant Dis.77:340, 1993.
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