Close similarities between Cherry chlorotic rusty spot disease from Italy and Cherry leaf scorch from Spain

Autor/innen

  • M. Barone
  • L. Covelli
  • F. Di Serio
  • R. Carrieri
  • M. T. Garcia Becedas
  • A. Ragozzino
  • D. Alioto

Abstract

Cherry chlorotic rusty spot (CCRS), a disease affecting sweet and sour cherry in Southern Italy was regularly found associated with an unidentified fungus and with a complex pattern of viral-like double-stranded RNAs as well as with two small circular RNAs (cherry small circular RNAs, cscRNAs). Further studies revealed that i) the ds-RNAs correspond to the genome of different mycoviruses belonging to the genera Chrysovirus, Partitivirus and Totivirus and ii) the two viroid-like RNAs consist of two groups of variants with similar sequences but differing in size (394–415 and 372–377 nt for cscRNA1 and cscRNA2, respectively). Here we report that the dsRNAs of Chrysovirus and Partitivirus have been detected by RT-PCR analysis with CCRS specific primers in nucleic acid preparations from cherry leaves affected by cherry leaf scorch (CLS) in Spain, a disease whose etiological agent is the ascomycetes Apiognomonia erythrostoma, order Diaporthales. Moreover, Northern-blot hybridization assays showed that a viroid-like RNA comigrating and sharing high sequence similarity with the cscRNA1 previously reported in Italy, accumulate in leaves from CLS affected trees in Spain. These data, together with other evidence showing similar symptoms, disease cycle and fungal fructifications in CCRS and CLS affected trees, suggest a close relationship between the two cherry disorders.

Keywords: dsRNAs, cscRNAs, Apiognomonia erythrostoma, Diaporthales

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Veröffentlicht

2010-09-28