Abstract

SUMMARYCultures of Bemisia tabaci from Ivory Coast (IC), Pakistan (PK) and USA (US B‐type) were compared for the frequency with which they transmitted three tomato geminivirus isolates: Indian tomato leaf curl virus from Bangalore (ITmLCV), and tomato yellow leaf curl viruses from Nigeria (TYLCV‐Nig) and Senegal (TYLCV‐Sen). Frequency of transmission from tomato to tomato depended both on the whitefly culture and the virus isolate. US B‐type and IC whiteflies transmitted TYLCV‐Sen more frequently than ITmLCV whereas PK whiteflies transmitted ITmLCV more frequently than TYLCV‐Sen. US B‐type whiteflies transmitted both viruses four to nine times more frequently than IC whiteflies. TYLCV‐Nig was transmitted rarely by US B‐type and not at all by IC whiteflies.Previous work indicates that the geminivirus coat protein controls vector transmissibility. The differential adaptation of TYLCV‐Sen to transmission by US B‐type whiteflies and of ITmLCV to PK whiteflies was associated with a large difference in epitope profile of the coat proteins of the two viruses. Also, the readily transmissible TYLCV‐Sen differed appreciably in epitope profile from the poorly transmissible TYLCV‐Nig, which reached a consistently greater concentration in source tissues but lacked epitope 18. However, the lack of epitope 18 in ITmLCV did not prevent its transmission by US B‐type whiteflies. Differences in frequency and specificity of geminivirus transmission by whitefly cultures from different countries therefore were associated with differences among epitope profiles of the coat proteins of the viruses, but the structural features of the proteins that control transmission remain to be determined.

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