4.7 Article

Screening and field trials of virus resistant sources in Capsicum spp.

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PLANT DISEASE
卷 87, 期 7, 页码 779-783

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AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS.2003.87.7.779

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Thirty-seven Capsicum accessions containing cultivated and wild species were screened for resistance to Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV), and were also investigated for their response to Tomato aspermy virus (TAV), Tomato mosaic virus (ToMV), Pepper mild mottle virus (PMMoV), and Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV). C. baccatum PI 439381-1-3 (PI 439381-1-3), C. frutescens LS 1839-2-4 (LS 1839-2-4), and C. frutescens cv. Tabasco (cv. Tabasco) showed a hypersensitive reaction against CMV-Y, and thus were not systemically infected. Only inoculated leaves of C. annuum cv. Sapporo-oonaga and cv. Nanbu-oonaga were infected with CMV-Y, and viral infection did not spread systemically. These five accessions (PI 439381-1-3, LS 1839-2-4. cv. Tabasco, cv. Sapporo-oonaga, and cv. Nanbu-oonaga) were considered resistant to CMV-Y. These accessions were also resistant to other CMV isolates, but not to the TAV isolate. PI 439381-1-3, LS1839-2-4, cv. Sapporo-oonaga, and cv. Nanbu-oonaga were susceptible to PMMoV. while PI 439381-1-3 and LS1839-2-4 showed systemic necrosis. All CMV-resistant accessions were susceptible to TSWV. Field tests of eight Capsicum accessions, including CMV. PMMoV, and/or TSWV-resistant accessions, demonstrated that most of the PI 439381-1-3 plants were not infected with CMV and PMMoV among the virus-infested fields. As occurred with mechanical inoculation, LS 1839-2-4, cv. Tabasco, cv. Sapporo-oonaga, and cv. Nanbu-oonaga were hard to infect with CMV in the field.

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