Abstract

AbstractVirions of the cacao swollen shoot virus (CSSV) strain 1A were purified and used for studies of its particle components. CSSV virions had a buoyant density of 1.365 g/cm3 in buffered CsCl. Following SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), CSSV‐specific proteins were identified in electroblot immunoassays (EBIA) with cross‐absorbed polyclonal antibodies and especially well with monoclonal antibodies (MABs) to CSSV‐1A. Based upon EBIA experiments with a selected MAB, CSSV virions appeared to have one capsid protein species with a relative molecular mass (M), of about 43 kd that was shown to be not glycosylated. However, this protein is sensitive to proteolytic degradation as degradation products ranging from 37 to 33 kd were found in addition to the 43 kd protein. Studies on the viral genome of CSSV revealed that CSSV virions contain a DNA of about 7. 5 kbp. Nucleic acid probes obtained by cloning parts of the viral genome yielded specific hybridization reactions with extracts and preparations from plants infected with strain 1A of CSSV but not with those from non‐inoculated plants. One clone of 738 bp was sequenced and shown to contain a motif similar to the putative RNA binding domain of pararetroviruses. Based upon particle morphology and properties of the virion components, CSSV can be grouped with other nonenveloped bacilliform viruses for which the name badnaviruses has been proposed.

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