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Cayaponia tibiricae: New Host of Zucchini Yellow Mosaic Virus in Brazil

May 1999 , Volume 83 , Number  5
Pages  486.3 - 486.3

V. A. Yuki , Centro de Fitossanidade, Instituto Agronômico, 13020-902 Campinas, SP, Brazil ; J. A. M. Rezende and E. W. Kitajima (Fellows of CNPq), Dept. de Entomologia, Fitopatologia e Zoologia Agrícola, ESALQ/USP, 13418-900 Piracicaba, SP, Brazil ; P. A. V. Barroso and H. Kuniyuki (Fellow of CNPq), Centro de Fitossanidade, Instituto Agronômico, 13020-902 Campinas, SP, Brazil ; G. A. Groppo , DEX-TRU/CATI, 13073-001 Campinas, SP, Brazil ; and M. A. Pavan , Dept. de Defesa Fitossanitária, FCA/UNESP, 18603-970 Botucatu, SP, Brazil



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Accepted for publication 5 March 1999.

Cayaponia tibiricae Cogn. (CT) is a wild Cucurbitaceae species found in secondary forests in the State of São Paulo, Brazil. The species has indefinite growth and bears oblong dark green fruits, 15 to 20 mm long (1,2). CT plants showing yellow mosaic symptoms were found in Atibaia County. Extracts from symptomatic plants were rub inoculated to zucchini squash (Cucurbita pepo L.) and Chenopodium amaranticolor Coste & Reyn. Zucchini squash plants developed severe yellow mosaic with intense leaf malformation, while C. amaranticolor showed necrotic local lesions. Extracts from naturally infected CT, zucchini squash, and C. amaranticolor were tested by plate trapped antigen-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (PTA-ELISA) with antisera against papaya ringspot virus type W (PRSV-W), zucchini yellow mosaic virus (ZYMV), zucchini lethal chlorosis virus (ZLCV), watermelon mosaic virus 2 (WMV-2), and cucumber mosaic virus (CMV). All samples were positive in PTA-ELISA only with ZYMV antiserum. Also, in Western blot (immunoblot) assay, ZYMV antiserum labeled a protein of approximately 36 kDa. Electron microscopic examination of ultrathin sections from infected CT tissue revealed the presence of pinwheel inclusions typical of potyvirus (type 1) infection in the cytoplasm of the cell. CT seedlings were susceptible to mechanical inoculation with the ZYMV isolated from this species. This is the first report of CT as a natural host for ZYMV in Brazil.

References: (1) A. Cogniaux. Flora Brasiliensis 6:1, 1878. (2) M. Pio Corrêa. 1926. Diccionário das plantas úteis do Brasil e das exóticas cultivadas. Vol 1. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.



© 1999 The American Phytopathological Society