Detection of Potyvirus-like Particles Associated with Oil Palms (Elaeis guineensis) in Ecuador
artículo original
Fecha
1996-09-03Autor
Rivera Herrero, Carmen
Pereira Reyes, Reinaldo
Moreira Carmona, Lisela
Chinchilla López, Carlos Manuel
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Oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) seedlings showing a conspicuous mottling, composed of alternating dark green and chlorotic areas in the form of discontinuous streaks or irregular ring patterns, were observed in the occidental region of Ecuador. Leaves from normal and symptomatic plants were analyzed by transmission electron microscopy. The leaf-dip preparations and partially purified preparations from symptomatic plants consistently contained filamentous, flexuous, rod-shaped, viral particles of approximately 682 x 13 nm. The size and morphology of the particles resemble those previously reported for palm mosaic virus, a virus that is tentatively placed in the potyviridae (1). Cylindrical inclusion (CI) bodies containing laminated aggregates, nuclear fibrillar inclusion bodies, viral particles scattered in the cytoplasm, and bundles of particles attached to CI plates and to the tonoplast were only observed in thin sections of symptomatic leaf tissue. CI bodies were similar to those reported for palm mosaic virus (1). The size and morphology of the particles and the type of the inclusion bodies observed are similar to those of potyviruses. Therefore, we suggest that the symptoms observed in oil palm are caused by a potyvirus, which is probably palm mosaic virus. This is the first report of a potyvirus infecting Elaeis guineensis in Ecuador.
External link to the item
10.1094/PD-80-1301D
Copyright 1996 The American Phytopathological Society.
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- Agronomía [1485]