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Occurrence of a Strain of Texas pepper virus in Tabasco and Habanero Pepper in Costa Rica

February 2000 , Volume 84 , Number  2
Pages  168 - 172

Pongtharin Lotrakul , Rodrigo A. Valverde , Rodolfo De La Torre , and Jeonggu Sim , Department of Plant Pathology and Crop Physiology, Louisiana Agricultural Experiment Station, Louisiana State University Agricultural Center, Baton Rouge 70803 ; and Alvaro Gomez , Inversiones Agroindustriales PEMACA S.A., Apartado 1161-7050, Cartago, Costa Rica



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Accepted for publication 9 November 1999.
ABSTRACT

A viral disease causing severe leaf malformation and yellow mottle on Tabasco (Capsicum frutescens) and Habanero (C. chinense) pepper plants was observed in 1997 on farms in southwestern Costa Rica. Whiteflies (Bemisia tabaci) were present on affected farms and transmitted the putative virus. Total DNA was extracted from a whitefly-transmitted isolate, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed using degenerate primers. The expected PCR product (550 bp) was obtained, suggesting the presence of a geminivirus. This was confirmed by Southern analysis using a geminivirus-specific probe. The virus was mechanically transmitted from pepper to pepper. Electron microscopy of ultrathin sections from infected Tabasco pepper plants revealed fibrillar rings and viruslike particles in the nucleus of the vascular parenchyma cells. The sequence of DNA A was obtained from three overlapping PCR fragments amplified using three pairs of degenerate primers; PAL1v1978/PAR1c496, PCRc1/AV494, and PCRv181/ AC1048. The complete sequence of DNA A of this begomovirus consisted of 2,619 bp (GenBank accession number: AF149227) containing four open reading frames (ORF). The nucleotide sequence of the virus was 92.3% identical to DNA A of the Tamaulipas strain of Texas pepper virus (TPV-TAM). Phylogenetic analyses using AC1 and AV1 nucleotide sequences also indicated a close relationship between this virus and TPV. Based on the biological characteristics, the high percentage of nucleotide and derived amino acid sequence identities, and phyloge-netic analyses, we concluded that this virus is a distinct strain of TPV, and designated it as the Costa Rica strain. This is the first report of TPV in Costa Rica.



© 2000 The American Phytopathological Society