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Search for mild strains of Passion Fruit Woodiness Virus (PWV) and attempt to control the passion fruit woodiness by preimmunization.

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Author(s):
Quelmo Silva de Novaes
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: Piracicaba.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Escola Superior de Agricultura Luiz de Queiroz (ESALA/BC)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Jorge Alberto Marques Rezende; Cesar Martins Chagas; Hiroshi Kimati; Elliot Watanabe Kitajima; Gerd Walter Muller
Advisor: Jorge Alberto Marques Rezende
Abstract

The main purpose of this work was to select mild strains of Passion fruit woodiness virus (PWV) and to evaluate their protective effect in passion flower (Passiflora edulis f. flavicarpa Deg.) challenged with a severe strain of the virus. Three mild strains were selected from outstanding plants found in orchards severely affected by the virus (F-101, F-102 and F-103) and three others were obtained from blisters formed in passion flower leaves with mosaic (F-99, F-144 and F-145). The protective effect of the mild strains was evaluated in passion flower under greenhouse and field conditions. Plants preimmunized with mild strains F-101, F-102 and F-144, under greenhouse conditions, showed partial protection after challenge inoculation with the severe strain PWV-SP. Total absence of protection was observed in passion flower preimmunized with all six mild strains and challenged with PWV-SP in the first field experiment. Due to these results, two hypotheses were raised to explain the intensification of symptoms in passion flower preimmunized with mild strains and challenged with the severe strain of the virus: a) the occurrence of low concentration and/or irregular distribution of the mild strains in the tissues of the preimmunized plants allow the infection and establishment of the later inoculated severe strain and b) the selected mild strains belong to a different species of Potyvirus, serologically related to PWV, but that do not offer protection against the severe strain of PWV. The first hypothesis was studied in a field experiment with passion flower preimmunized with mild strains F-101 and F-144, separately, and cultivated under screenhouse. Before the challenge inoculation, leaf samples were taken from five leaves of all protected plants and the concentration of the mild strains was estimated by indirect DAS-ELISA. A group of plants was challenged in three expanded leaves of the vine and another group was challenged with viruliferous aphids placed on the tip of the vine. All preimmunized plants showed severe symptoms of the disease, four months after the challenge inoculation. A great variation was observed in the concentration of the mild strains in the tissues of different leaves of the same plant. The ELISA test was not able to detect the mild strains in extracts of 205 out of 300 leaf disks. The second hypothesis was tested with crotalaria plants (Crotalaria juncea L.) preimmunized with mild strains F-101 and F-144 and analysis of the nucleotide sequence of the coat protein gene of the F-101, F-103 and PWV-SP strains. All preimmunized crotalaria plants were protected against the infection and/or manifestation of the symptoms caused by the severe strain PWV-SP. Quantitative studies of the mild strains in crotalaria revealed a larger uniformity in the concentration of the virus in the leaves. The analysis of the nucleotide sequence of the coat protein gene pointed out identity of 99.7% among the mild strains. The severe strain shared 97.5 % identity with both mild strains, showing that they are all strains of the same virus. These results showed that preimmunization does not seem to be an appropriate alternative for the control of the passion fruit woodiness disease in passion flower due to the breakdown in protection. Failure in protection seems to be related to the low concentration and/or irregular distribution of the mild strains in the leaves of the passion flower, which allow the occurrence of infection sites available for superinfection with the severe strain. (AU)