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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Article
Author(s)
Adyatma Irawan Santosa, Ibrahim Mohamed Al-Shahwan, Omer Ahmed Abdalla, Mohamed Ali Al-Saleh and Mahmoud Ahmed Amer
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DOI:10.17265/2161-6256/2018.04.005
Affiliation(s)
Plant Protection Department, College of Food and Agriculture Sciences, King Saud University, P.O. Box 2460, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia
ABSTRACT
In one of the field visits to cucurbits-growing areas in vicinity of
Riyadh city during 2013-2015, severe virus disease-like symptoms were observed
on watermelon in Al-Ammariyah area. Mechanical inoculation of the different
plant species used in the host range study, from the collected symptomatic watermelon
samples, produced mosaic symptoms on Citrullus lanatus, Cucumis
sativus, Cucurbita pepo, C. melo, C. melo subsp. melo and Nicotiana benthamiana, but chlorotic local lesions on Chenopodium
amaranticolor. No symptoms were observed on the
rest of the other inoculated plant species. The virus was transmitted by Aphis
gossypii and A. craccivora in a non-persistent manner. Transmission electron
microscopic examination of watermelon samples using the leaf dip method
revealed only microscopic filamentous shaped virus particles measuring 750 nm
in length and 12 nm in diameter in average. ELISA revealed positive results
only to Watermelon mosaic virus (WMV) and negative to Zucchini yellow mosaic virus (ZYMV), Papaya ringspot
virus (PRSV), Cucumber mosaic
virus (CMV) and Squash mosaic
virus (SqMV). Specific bands of
approximately 825 bp were formed on agarose gel following electrophoresis of
the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) products of each of
the naturally infected C. lanatus,
and artificially infected C. lanatus, C. pepo, C. sativus, and N. benthamiana. The homology tree that
was constructed from multiple sequence alignments of the detected Saudi
Arabian isolate of WMV (WMV-SA) with 18 other isolates of WMV from
nine different countries indicated close relationships between them. Two
isolates from Spain and two other isolates from Iran were more closely related
to the WMV-SA whereas the isolate from Poland was the least.
KEYWORDS
Watermelon, ELISA, nucleotide sequence, RT-PCR, Saudi Arabia, Watermelon mosaic virus.
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