Abstract

Rice stripe mosaic disease (RSMD) is caused by the rice stripe mosaic virus (RSMV; genus Cytorhabdovirus, family Rhabdoviridae). In recent years, significant progress has been made in understanding several aspects of the disease, especially its geographical distribution, symptoms, vectors, gene functions, and control measures. Since RSMD was first detected in southern China in 2015, it has been found in more and more rice growing areas and has become one of the most important rice diseases in southern China. RSMV is transmitted by the leafhopper Recilia dorsalis in a persistent-propagative manner, inducing yellow stripes, a slight distortion of leaves, increased tillers, and empty grains in rice plants. The virus has a negative-sense single-strand RNA genome of about 12.7 kb that encodes seven proteins: N, P, P3, M, G, P6, and L. Several molecular and serological tests have been developed to detect RSMV in plants and insects. The disease cycle can be described as follows: RSMV and its vector overwinter in infected plants; viruliferous R. dorsalis adults transmit the virus to spring rice and lay eggs on the infected seedlings; the next generation of R. dorsalis propagate on infected seedlings, become viruliferous, disperse, and cause new disease outbreaks. Control measures include monitoring and accurate forecasting, selecting disease-resistant varieties, improving cultivation systems, covering rice seedling nurseries with insect-proof nets, and using pesticides rationally. Inappropriate cultivation systems, pesticide overuse, and climatic conditions contribute to epidemics by affecting the development of vector insects and their population dynamics.

Highlights

  • In 2015, rice stripe mosaic disease (RSMD) was first discovered in the southwestern rice region of Guangdong province in China

  • Rice stripe mosaic virus is a new species in the genus Cytorhabdovirus, family Rhabdoviridae (Yang et al, 2017a; Kuhn et al, 2020)

  • This review described the most recent progress regarding the potential rice stripe mosaic virus (RSMV) research directions and provides a more detailed understanding of this emerging virus, but near future research should focus on, but not be limited to, the following areas

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

In 2015, rice stripe mosaic disease (RSMD) was first discovered in the southwestern rice region of Guangdong province in China. The disease is caused by rice stripe mosaic virus (RSMV) and transmitted by the leafhopper Recilia dorsalis (Yang et al, 2017a,b; Kuhn et al, 2020), and mainly occurs in seven provinces of southern China (Chen et al, 2019a). Plants were found in about 61.76% of fields This disease was only occasionally found in other rice areas (Chen et al, 2019a). From 2019 to RSMV-infected rice plants have occasionally been observed in parts of Jiangxi, Hunan, and Yunnan province (Figure 1), indicating that the distribution of RSMD is gradually expanding and that the risk of harm to rice production is increasing

HOST RANGE AND SYMPTOMATOLOGY
TRANSMISSION BIOLOGY
INFLUENCE ON VECTOR INSECT
VIRION COMPOSITION AND MORPHOLOGY
VIRAL GENOMIC STRUCTURE AND GENETIC VARIATION
Putative function
RSMV TRANSCRIPTION AND REPLICATION
DISEASE DIAGNOSIS AND DETECTION
Disease Cycle
Disease Control
EPIDEMIC TRENDS
CONCLUSION AND FUTURE PERSPECTIVES
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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