• Title/Summary/Keyword: tobacco mosaic virus(TMV)

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Detection of tobacco mosaic virus from "Kimchi" (김치에서의 활성 TMV 검출)

  • 박은경;김정화;이영근
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Tobacco Science
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.43-47
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    • 1983
  • Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) was detected from Kimchi by biological and serological assay 5. Kimchi samples three month after cooked were collected, and were inoculated on N. tabacum var. Burley 21 and NC 95. Out of 33 samples, 6 showed typical symptoms induced by TMV, local necrotic lesions on Burley 21 and mosaic on NC 95. All saps from tobacco leaves showed the mosaic symptom reacted positively against TMV antiserum by agar gel double diffusion test. Based on the results, the Kimchi is considered as one of the important inoculum sources in Korea.

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Responses to Infection of Tobacco Mosaic Virus Pepper Strain (TMV-P) in Transgenic Tobacco Plants Expressing the TMV-P Coat Protein or Its Antisense RNA (담배 모자이크 바이러스 고추계통(TMV-P)의 외피단백질 유전자를 도입한 형질전환 담배의 TMV-P에 대한 반응)

  • 최장경;홍은주;이재열;장무웅
    • Korean Journal Plant Pathology
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.374-379
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    • 1995
  • The cDNA of tobacco mosaic virus-pepper strain (TMV-P) coat protein (CP) genes were introduced into tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Samsun nn) using a binary Ti plasmid vector of Agrobacterium tumefaciens. these cDNAs introduced into tobacco plants were detected by polymerase chain reaction. Symptom development was distinctly suppressed in the transgenic plant introduced buy sense CP cDNA when the plant was inoculated with TMV-P, while in transgenic tobacco plants of antisense CP gene, symptom development was not suppressed as in non-transgenic plants. TMV-P concentration in the sense CP transgenic tobacco plant was decreased to 1/14 of the concentration in non-transgenic plants. Expression of the kanamycin resistance gene of these transgenic plants could be detected in the progeny.

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Characteristics of Tobacco Mosaic Virus Isolated from Wasabi (Eutrema wasabi) in Korea

  • Kim, Hyung-Moo;Lee, Kui-Jae
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.15 no.4
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    • pp.247-250
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    • 1999
  • Wasabies showing mosaic symptoms were collected and extracted for virus purification. Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) was identified as causal agent by electron microscopy and nucleic acid and coat protein analyses. TMV strains were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). TMV was identified as W and C strain in wasabi. The results of host reaction indicated that this virus induced local lesions on Nicotiana tabacum cv. Bright Yellow and N. glutinosa, leaf spots on Chenopodium amaranticolor and mosaic symptoms on wasabi. Rot shape virus particles were observed and was about 300 nm in length. About 6.5 kb single RNA molecule was observed from extracted viral RNA sample and 26 KDa coat protein was detected in denatured acrylamide gel. Infection ratio of TMV was 8% for the first cultivation year, but was 22% for the second year when TMV-W antiserum was used. The results of this experiment showed that infection ratios of both TMV-W and TMV-C strains were higher compared to that of TMV-P strain.

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Pathogenicity and localization of the tobacco mosaic virus 4.8 kDa protein(oral)

  • Palukaitis, P.;Canto, T.;MacFarlane Scottish, S.A.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Plant Pathology Conference
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    • 2003.10a
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    • pp.65.1-65
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    • 2003
  • In addition to the five well-characterized genes of Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), this virus contains a sixth open reading frame (ORF6) that encodes a 4.8 kDa protein. TMV ORF6 overlaps the ORFs encoding the 30 kDa movement protein and the adjacent 17.5 kDa capsid protein. Although the 4.8 kDa protein could not be detected in vivo, alteration of the AUG codons of this ORF resulted in a mutant virus that attenuated the virulence of the mutated TMV in Nicotiana benthamiana, but not N. tabacum (tobacco). These sequence changes did not affect either the replication or movement of the mutated TMV. Expression of TMV ORF6 from the virus expression vector Potato virus X (PVX) intensified the virulence of this virus in N. benthmiana, but not tobacco, while expression of TMV ORF6 from the virus expression vector Tobacco rattle virus enhanced the pathogenicity observed in both N. benthamima and tobacco. Thus, the TMV ORF6 is a host- and virus-specific. virulence factor. However, two separate assays indicated that the TMV 4.8 kDa protein was not a suppression of RNA silencing. A fusion protein formed between the TMV 4.8 kDa protein and the green fluorescent protein was expressed from the PVX vector and localized to plasmodesmata. Possible roles of the 4.8 kDa protein in pathogenicity will be discussed

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Serological Investigation of Virus Diseases of Tobacco Plant (Nicotiana tabaccum L.) In Korea (혈청학적 방법에 의한 잎담배 바이러스병의 감염상 조사)

  • Park Eun Kyung;La Yong Joon;Heu Il;Lee Yong Deuk
    • Korean journal of applied entomology
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    • v.14 no.2 s.23
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    • pp.59-63
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    • 1975
  • A total of 40 virus infected tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabaccum L.) with various symptom types Were collected from Bucheon and Jeonju area by its symptoms were investigated on the incidence of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), cucumber mosaic virus (CMV), alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV), potato virus X (PVX) and potato virus Y (PVY) by serological methods. van Slogteren's microprecipitin test was applied for the testing of PVX and PVY from infected plants and Ouchterlony agar double diffusion test was used for CMV, TMV and AMV. Results obtained are as follows: 1. TMV, CMV, AMV, PVX and PVY wcre found to occur on the tobacco plants growing in Korea. 2. The prevalence of each of these viruses among the 40 tobacco plants investigated was in the order of AMV: $(67.5\%)>CMV:(60.0\%)>TMY:(47.5\%)>PVY:(17.5\%)>PVX: (10.0\%).$ 3. In Burley variety, the percentage of infection by TMV was $15\%$, whereas it was as high as $80\%$ in Hicks variety. 4. Among the 40 tobacco plants investigated, $37.5\%$ showed infection with one kind of virus whereas the remaining $62.5\%$, revealed mixed infection with more than two different viruses.

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Inhibitory Activity of Bacterial Isolate Pseudomonas sp. KTB61 against Tobacco Mosaic Virus(TMV) Infection to Tobacco Plants (세균 분리주 KTB61의 담배 모자이크 바이러스(TMV) 감염 억제 효과)

  • 김영숙;여운형;유승헌;김갑식
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Tobacco Science
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    • v.24 no.1
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    • pp.7-12
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    • 2002
  • During the screening or antiviral substances having inhibitory effect on tobacco mosaic virus(TMV) infection to tobacco plants, we found that a bacterial isolate, KTB61, which was identified as a Pseudomonas sp., strongly inhibited the formation of TMV local lesions. When the culture filtrate from KTB61 was applied on the upper surface of leaves of N. tabaccum Xanthi-nc tobacco at the same time of or 24 hours before TMV inoculation, almost complete inhibition was achieved. Incidence of systemic TMV infection to the susceptible tobacco cultivar, NC82, was reduced by 95% when TMV was inoculated onto the upper surface of leaves 24 hours after spraying the culture filtrate. Also 75∼80% of inhibitory effect was obtained by the inoculation of TMV onto the under surface of the leaves treated with culture filtrate 24 hours beforehand. In field trials, the TMV infection was reduced by 96.5% when the tobacco seedlings, N. tabaccum cv. NC82, were soaked with culture filtrate before transplanting.

Studies with the tobacco mosaic viruses (한국산 연초 "바이러스"에 관한 연구)

  • 김은수;소인영
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.10-18
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    • 1963
  • Studies with the Tobacco Mosaic Viruses; W. S Kim, and So, I Y., (Dept. of biology Sung Kyun Kwan Univer. Seoul, Korea.). Using the common strain of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) which was sent from the Dept. of Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin, U.S.A. as control virus, a possible new strain of tobacco mosaic virus (SMV) was isolated from tobacco leaves collected from Tobacco Experiment Station farms as well as from various blends of manufactured Korean cigaretts. SMV was isolated by single lesion isolation method and by inoculating the virus through various species of host plants. The two viruses, TMV and SMV were indentified by the difference in symptoms, host range, serological reaction, and electron micrograpy. As the results of the above experiment the author believes the virus isolate SMV is a different strain of TMV. The experimental evidences that SMV belongs to the TMV group are as follows; 1. Both viruses produced local necrotic lesions on Nicotiana glutimosa L. 2. Both showed a dilution end point of $10^8$. 3. Aphid transmission was failed with the viruses. 4. Both had an isoelectric point around pH 3.3. 5. Two viruses were serological reactive. 6. The size of the virus particles was around 270-300mu as they were observed under the electron microscope. The virus SMV, however, is different from the common strain of TMV and the experimental evidences are as follows; 1. SMV produced quite different symptoms from TMV on various host plants like tobacoo(Nicotiana tabacum L., White Burley), Nicotiana rustica L., Chenopodium Koreanse Nakai. Bata vulgaris L., and Datura tatula L., SMV produced distinct local lesions on these host plants whereas TMV incited largely mosaic diseases. 2. The serological titers obtained from the heterologous combinations were lower than those from homologous combinations of antigens and antiser.

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Control Effects of an Antibiotic Produced by Streptomyces sp. B25 on Tobacco Mosaic Virus and Determination of Its Molecular Structure

  • Yeo, Woon-Hyung;Kim, Young-Ho;Kim, Young-Sook;Kim, Sang-Seock;Chae, Soon-Yong
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Tobacco Science
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    • v.20 no.2
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    • pp.172-177
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    • 1998
  • The culture filtrate of Streptomyces sp. B25, which was identified in this experiment, was tested for the control of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) with the susceptible tobacco cultivar, NC 82, under the field conditions following the preliminary examination of its characters for TMV control. Control efficacy of the culture filtrate against TMV infection continued over 50% up to 6 days after treatment, and its systemic effect was about 30% of the direct effect. In field conditions control efficacy of the culture filtrate against TMV infection was 95.3 % at 2 weeks after TMV inoculation, and decreased to 58.3 % at 3 weeks after inoculation. Five fold-dilution of the culture filtrate showed about half of the control efficacy by the stock culture filtrate. Analysis of the antibiotic material responsible for the inhibition of TMV infection through nuclear magnetic resonance experiments revealed that the antibiotic is antimycin $A_1$, which is firstly reported as an anti-phytoviral antibiotic in this experiment.

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Disease Severity of Tobacco Plants Surveyed in the Northern Kyeongbuk Province in 1992 (1992년도 경북북부지역의 담배병해 발생상황)

  • 이영근
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Tobacco Science
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    • v.15 no.1
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    • pp.15-25
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    • 1993
  • The severities of major tobacco diseases had been surveyed throughout northern Kyeongbuk, a major flue-cured tobacco growing district in Korea, in relation to the actual control method used by the farmers in 1992. At seedling stage, anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum nicotianae was major disease of the plant due to poor damage of the temporary transplanting pots. Mosaic caused by tobacco mosaic virus(TMV) was very severe in certain of greenhouses. Although viral disease caused by TMV, cucumber mosaic virus(CMV) and by potato virus Y(PVY) were severe in fields, but mosaic by TMV was major of the diseases. Potato virus Y was found later than that in Honam district. The late occurrence of the disease might be caused the difference between cultivating method of potato plants in northern Kyeongbuk and that in Honam district. In fields suffered from hail disaster, the damage of tobacco plants by angular leaf spot was severe. Most of tobacco growers had wrong information about the practical methods not only of milk treatment for the protection of the plants from TMV, but also of fungicide applications for the control of other major diseases. It suggested that education on the methods to the farmers must be very important for control of the diseases.

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Characterization of Tobacco mosaic virus Isolated fromSolanum tuberosum ‘Chubak’ in Korea (감자 '추백' 에 발생한 Tobacco mosaic virus 의 특성)

  • Kim, Joung-Soo;Kim, Jae-Hyun;Choi, Gug-Seoun;Chae, Soo-Young;Kim, Hyun-Ran;Joung, Bong-Nam;Choi, Yong-Mun
    • Research in Plant Disease
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    • v.9 no.2
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    • pp.89-93
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    • 2003
  • An isolate of Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) was isolated from potato cultivar ‘Chubak’ showing vein clearing and mild mosaic at Namhae in Korea. This isolate, TMV-St, was differentiated from other tobamoviruses based on biological properties, serological relationships and nucleotide sequence analyses of coat protein genes. TMV-St caused typical symptoms on four indicator plants as compared to the tobamovirus of TMV-U1, Pepper mild mottle virus (PMMoV), and Tomato mosaic virus (ToMV), which caused economic losses in Solanaceous vegetables, tomato, pepper, and eggplant. Remarkably, the TMV-St induced distinctly different symptom of systemic chlorotic spots on Chenophodium murale. On C. murale, Gomphorena globosa, and Nic-otiana rustica, the four viruses were classed by the virulence of systemic or local infections. In serological test TMV-St antiserum showed a precipitation line with each other tabamovirus. The CP gene of TMV-St contain 477 nucleotides, and the nucleotides sequence was the most similar to that of TMV-U1.