Abstract

Abstract: Infection with phloem limited Abutilon Mosaic Virus caused localized carbohydrate accumulation (high levels of starch, sucrose, and hexoses) in leaves of Abutilon striatum during early symptom development. In mature leaves with attenuated symptoms, tissues showing faint vein‐clearing had markedly higher carbohydrate contents than uniformly green areas of the same leaf. A similar pattern of carbohydrate accumulation was found in pale‐green mosaics in mature leaves with overt symptoms when compared to green‐islands of the same leaf, but overnight carbohydrate loses were comparable to controls. Because leaves with attenuated symptoms showed no further symptom development whereas the pale‐green mosaics became yellow and eventually necrotic in leaves with overt symptoms, it seems unlikely that carbohydrate accumulation following impaired translocation was responsible for symptom expression. High carbohydrate status in leaves with attenuated symptoms had little effect on nonphotochemical quenching during early stages of photosynthetic induction. In leaves with overt symptoms, areas of high carbohydrate status with pale‐green mosaics showed markedly slower nonphotochemical quenching. Early symptom areas of young leaves, and advanced symptom areas of mature leaves had low starch contents but were otherwise similar to controls in carbohydrate status. Impaired nonphotochemical quenching in these tissues tended to reflect the state of symptom development, rather than carbohydrate status. Plants with overt symptoms grew about half as fast as plants with attenuated symptoms.

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