Cite this publication as: ICTVdB Management (2006). 00.029.0.02.001. Beet curly top virus. In: ICTVdB - The Universal Virus Database, version 4. Büchen-Osmond, C. (Ed), Columbia University, New York, USA
Cite this site as: ICTVdB - The Universal Virus Database, version 4. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ICTVdb/ICTVdB/
Host of Isolate and Habitat Details
Source of
isolate: Beta vulgaris.
Natural host and symptoms
Spinacia oleracea, Cucurbitaceae,
Phaseolus vulgaris, Linum ssp., Capsicum ssp.,
Lycopersicon esculentum, Solanum tuberosum, and many other species
vein-clearing, swelling and malformation in young leaves; rigid, dwarfed,
yellowed, twisted and malformed leaves; axillary buds stimulated, phloem
necrosis, exudation of fluid from phloem; death of plant. Some hosts
symptomless.
Beta vulgaris leaf rolling, vein clearing, leaves become dark, dull green in colour, thick crisp and brittle. Comments on host and host range: no monocotyledonous species found to be susceptible.
Reference to Isolation Report
Ball (1909).
ICTVdB Virus Code: 00.029.0.02.001. Virus accession number:
29002001. Obsolete virus code: 29.0.2.0.001; superceded accession number:
29020001.
NCBI Taxon Identifier NCBI Taxonomy ID:
10840.
Electron micrograph of
Geminiviridae by R.G. Milne, Istituto di Virologia, CRN, Torino, Italy.
Electron microscopic preparation and references: Virus preparation contains in crude leaf sap few virions or many particles in purified preparations. Larsen and Duffus (1984) report an average of 500 μ/kg of tissue and as high as 2.8mg/kg. In electron micrographs of purified virus extracts trimer particles are found in low concentrations among the monomer and dimer particles.
Reference for electron microscopic methods: Mink and Thomas (1974, Mumford (1974; 1977); Larsen and Duffus (1984).
GenBank records for nucleotide sequences; complete genome sequences.
Domain
Viral hosts belong to the Domain
Eucarya.
Domain Eucarya
Kingdom Plantae.
Kingdom Plantae
Phylum Magnoliophyta
(Angiosperms, Class Magnoliopsida (Dicotyledonae).
Class Magnoliopsida (Dicotyledonae)
Subclass
CARYOPHYLLIDAE; Order Caryophyllales.
Vector Transmission:
Virus is transmitted by arthropods, by insects
of the order Hemiptera, family Cicadellidae; Circulifer tenellus in N.
America, C. tenellus, C. opacipennis in Mediterranean Basin. Virus is
transmitted in a persistent manner; retained when the vector moults; does not
replicate in the vector; not transmitted congenitally to the progeny of the
vector.
Experimentally infected insusceptible Hosts: Families containing insusceptible hosts: Amaranthaceae, Compositae, or Leguminosae-Papilionoideae, Solanaceae. Species inoculated with virus that do not show signs of susceptibility: Celosia argentea, Datura stramonium, Lycopersicon esculentum, Lycopersicon pimpinellifolium, Phaseolus lunatus, Solanum tuberosum, Sonchus oleraceus.
Beta vulgaris vein-clearing and upward and inward rolling of leaves. Vein swelling and galling to give rough abaxial leaf surface. Phloem exudate on petioles and large leaf veins, phloem necrosis in roots.
Cucumis sativus seedlings killed. Older plants stunted and malformed, leaves rolled upward.
Phaseolus vulgaris cv. Bountiful first trifoliate leaf epinastic. Buds of survivors proliferate, leaflets brittle, curled and crinkled.
References to host data: Bennet (1971).
Histopathology: Virus can be best detected in phloem. Virions are found in the nucleus.
Ball, E.D. (1909). Bull. Bur. Ent. U.S. Dep. Agric. 66: 33.
Bennett, CW (1971). Monogr. Am. Phytopath. Soc. No. 7: 81.
Larsen, R.C. and Duffus, J.E. (1984) A simplified procedure for the purification of curly top virus and the isolation of its monomer and dimer particles. Phytopathology 74: 114-118.
Mink, G.I. and Thomas, P.E. (1974). Phytopathology 64: 140.
Mumford, DL (1974). Phytopathology 64: 136.
Mumford, DL (1977). Phytopathology 67: 949.
Stanley, J., Markham, P.G., Callis, R.J. and Pinner, M.S. (1986). EMBO J. 5: 1761.
Thomas, P.E. and Mink, G.I. (1979). CMI/AAB Descr. Pl. Viruses No. 210, 6 pp.
The following generic references are cited in the most recent ICTV Report.
VIDEdB, the plant virus database developed at the Australian National University by Adrian J. Gibbs and collaborators, contains an earlier description with the number 81 by K. Boswell, 1985. A description of the virus is found in DPV, a database for plant viruses developed by the Association of Applied Biologists (AAB), with the number 210; at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln.
| | The description has been generated automatically from DELTA files. | |
ICTVdB - The Universal Virus Database, developed for the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) by Dr Cornelia Büchen-Osmond, is written in DELTA. The virus descriptions in ICTVdB are coded by ICTV members and experts, or by the ICTVdB Management using data provided by the experts, the literature or the latest ICTV Report. The character list is the underlying code. All virus descriptions are based on the character list and natural language translations from the encoded descriptions are automatically generated and formatted for display on the Web.
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Last updated on
25 April 2006 by Cornelia Büchen-Osmond
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