Title of article :
Stability of resistance against beet curly top disease in the presence of cucumber mosaic virus in Arabidopsis thaliana
Author/Authors :
Rezaei, Negin Department of Plant Pathology - Faculty of Agriculture - Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran , Montazeri, Razieh Department of Plant Pathology - Faculty of Agriculture - Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran , Shams-bakhsh, Masoud Department of Plant Pathology - Faculty of Agriculture - Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Curly top is one of the most important viral diseases of sugar beet. Use
of resistance sources is a promising strategy for control of this disease. In the
present study, the efficiency of four gene silencing constructs (OUT-hp ،IN-hp ،
sense and antisense) against two major causes of curly top disease in Iran, beet
curly top virus-Svr (BCTV) and beet curly top Iran virus (BCTIV), were evaluated
in transgenic plants. Selection of transgenic plant seeds was carried out on selective
medium 1/2MS containing glufosinate-ammonium (Basta) and the results showed
that the pBCTV-IN-hp construct resulted in the highest germinated seeds. Selected
plants were transferred to greenhouse and evaluated for resistance to basta and
detection of silencing constructs in the transgenic plants. Afterwards, resistance of
the selected transgenic plants to beet curly top viruses and resistance stability
against cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) was evaluated in a completely randomized
design with six treatments in a factorial experiment. The results showed that the
transformed lines with each of four constructs were significantly different in
severity of symptoms, plant height and number of flowering stems compared to
their respective controls. Although these transgenic plants were resistant to BCTVSvr
and BCTIV, in their challenge inoculation experiments it was shown that this
resistance was suppressed by CMV infection.
Keywords :
Geminiviruses , sugar beet , transgenic plant , silencing constructs
Journal title :
Journal of Crop Protection