Abstract

SUMMARYA virus was transmitted from broad bean plants in Apulia (Southern Italy) with leaves showing yellow rings, line patterns or yellow vein banding and malformations and necrosis of pods. Symptoms in some, but not all, test plants were similar to those induced by tobraviruses. Purified virus preparations contained two classes of rod‐shaped particles containing c. 5% nucleic acid with sedimentation coefficients of 186S and 276S. After centrifugation to equilibrium in CsCl gradients, two components were resolved, with buoyant densities of 1·298 and 1·316 g/cm3. Unfractionated virus preparations contained two species of single‐stranded RNA with mol. wts of c. 1·06 × 106 and 2·48 × 106 and one species of coat protein with mol. wt of c. 21 300. The modal lengths of the two classes of particles, both in plant sap and in purified preparations, were 77 nm (S particles) and 202 nm (L particles). L particles accumulated in infected cells in paracrystalline aggregates, whereas S particles were randomly distributed in the cytoplasm of cells. The virus was serologically unrelated to two isolates of tobacco rattle virus and two isolates of pea early‐browning virus. The virus, named broad bean yellow band, is considered a distinct tobravirus.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call