1. Pollen Transmission of Asparagus virus 2 (AV-2) May Facilitate Mixed Infection by Two AV-2 Isolates in Asparagus Plants
- Author
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Chikara Masuta, Hanako Shimura, Tomofumi Mochizuki, Satoshi T. Ohki, and Ryusuke Kawamura
- Subjects
Sequence analysis ,Cross Protection ,Meristem ,Nicotiana benthamiana ,Flowers ,Plant Science ,Ilarvirus ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virus ,law.invention ,law ,Pollen ,Tobacco ,Botany ,medicine ,Asparagus ,Pollination ,In Situ Hybridization ,Plant Diseases ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,Immunohistochemistry ,Transmission (mechanics) ,Seedlings ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Seeds ,Asparagus Plant ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Plant Shoots ,Mixed infection - Abstract
Asparagus virus 2 (AV-2) is a member of the genus Ilarvirus and thought to induce the asparagus decline syndrome. AV-2 is known to be transmitted by seed, and the possibility of pollen transmission was proposed 25 years ago but not verified. In AV-2 sequence analyses, we have unexpectedly found mixed infection by two distinct AV-2 isolates in two asparagus plants. Because mixed infections by two related viruses are normally prevented by cross protection, we suspected that pollen transmission of AV-2 is involved in mixed infection. Immunohistochemical analyses and in situ hybridization using AV-2-infected tobacco plants revealed that AV-2 was localized in the meristem and associated with pollen grains. To experimentally produce a mixed infection via pollen transmission, two Nicotiana benthamiana plants that were infected with each of two AV-2 isolates were crossed. Derived cleaved-amplified polymorphic sequence analysis identified each AV-2 isolate in the progeny seedlings, suggesting that pollen transmission could indeed result in a mixed infection, at least in N. benthamiana.
- Published
- 2014