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First Report of Tomato yellow leaf curl virus in China

October 2006 , Volume 90 , Number  10
Pages  1,359.3 - 1,359.3

J. B. Wu , State Key Laboratory of Rice Biology, Institute of Biotechnology, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, P. R. China ; F. M. Dai , Institute of Plant Protection, Shanghai Academy for Agricultural Sciences, Shanghai 201106, P. R. China ; and X. P. Zhou , State Key Laboratory of Rice Biology, Institute of Biotechnology, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, P. R. China



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Accepted for publication 26 July 2006.

Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) is a devastating pathogen of tomato that causes significant yield losses in many tropical and subtropical regions (2). In China, however, there has as yet been no report of this virus, although other begomoviruses have been reported infecting tomato (1,3). A yellow mosaic disease was observed on tomato with 90% disease incidence during March 2006 in fields of Sunqiao, Shanghai Province, China. Triple-antibody sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (TAS-ELISA) tests indicated that tomato plants were not infected by Tomato mosaic virus or Cucumber mosaic virus. Tomato plants were found to be infested with Bemisia tabaci, suggesting a begomovirus etiology. The disease agent was transmitted to tomato by whiteflies and produced yellow mosaic and stunting symptoms that were identical to those observed in the field. Total DNA was isolated from eight collected leaf samples. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed with begomovirus degenerate primers PA and PB (3), and an amplicon of the expected size (~500 bp) was obtained in all eight samples but not from healthy leaf samples. The PCR products from two samples (SH1 and SH2) were cloned and sequenced. All residues in the sequences were confirmed by comparison of duplicate clones. Alignment of the sequences showed that they shared 97.4% nucleotide sequence identity (GenBank Accession No. AM282874--75), suggesting that they were infected by an identical virus. Overlapping primers Full/F (5′-AGCCCAATACATTGGGCC ACGA-3′) and Full/R (5′-CGTAAGTTTCCTCAACGGACTGC-3′) were then designed to amplify the full length DNA-A of SH2. The sequence was determined to be 2,781 nucleotides long (GenBank Accession No. AM282874). A comparison with other begomoviruses shows SH2 DNA-A has the highest nucleotide sequence identity (99.8%) with TYLCV isolate Tosa from Japan (GenBank Accession No. AB192966). The above results indicate that the virus associated with yellow mosaic disease of tomato in Shanghai is an isolate of TYLCV. To our knowledge, this is the first report of TYLCV in China and the first report of a begomovirus in Shanghai.

References: (1) X. F. Cui et al. J. Virol. 78:13966, 2004. (2) E. Moriones and J. Navas-Castillo. Virus Res. 71:123, 2000. (3) Z. H. Li et al. Arch. Virol. 149:1721, 2004.



© 2006 The American Phytopathological Society