Characterization of South African Cryphonectria cubensis Isolates Infected with a C. parasitica Hypovirus
Open Access
- 1 July 2001
- journal article
- Published by Scientific Societies in Phytopathology®
- Vol. 91 (7) , 628-632
- https://doi.org/10.1094/phyto.2001.91.7.628
Abstract
Cryphonectria cubensis is the causal agent of a serious canker disease of Eucalyptus spp. in tropical and subtropical parts of the world. In this study, a South African C. cubensis isolate was transfected by electroporation with a synthetic RNA transcript corresponding to the full-length coding strand of the C. parasitica hypovirus (CHV1-EP713). Hypovirus infection resulted in pronounced morphological changes that included a striking increase in bright yellow-orange pigment production, a reduction in mycelial growth rate, and reduced sporulation. Greenhouse studies revealed that the virus-containing strain was significantly less virulent than the original virulent C. cubensis isolate. Although the hypovirus was not transmitted through conidia produced by infected C. cubensis, the virus was readily transmitted via hyphal anastomosis to C. cubensis isolates representing a broad range of vegetative compatibility groups. These results suggest that vegetative incompatibility may not pose a strong barrier against virus transmission in South African isolates of C. cubensis and that hypovirus-mediated biological control could provide opportunities to reduce the impact of Cryphonectria canker in South Africa.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genetic diversity of Cryphonectria cubensis isolates in South AfricaMycological Research, 2001
- Phenotypic Changes Associated with Wild-Type and Mutant Hypovirus RNA Transfection of Plant Pathogenic Fungi Phylogenetically Related toCryphonectria parasiticaPhytopathology®, 1996
- Transmission of hypovirulence agents among some Cryphonectria parasitica strains from ItalyForest Pathology, 1995
- Biological Control of Chestnut Blight: Use and Limitations of Transmissible HypovirulencePlant Disease, 1991
- Identifying Hypovirulent Isolates ofCryphonectria parasiticawith Broad Conversion CapacityPhytopathology®, 1984
- Oxalate production by virulent but not by hypovirulent strains of Endothia parasiticaPhysiological Plant Pathology, 1983
- Biology and Potential for Disease Control of Hypovirulence of Endothia ParasiticaAnnual Review of Phytopathology, 1982
- Hypovirulence Conversion inEndothia parasiticaPhytopathology®, 1979
- Vegetative incompatibility in Endothia parasiticaExperimental Mycology, 1977
- Double-stranded RNA in Endothia parasiticaPhytopathology®, 1977