ToChLPV and PepGMV are Begomoviruses that have adapted to a wide host range and are able to cause major diseases in agronomic crops. We analyzed the efficacy of induced resistance to PepGMV in Nicotiana benthamiana plants with two constructs: one construct with homologous sequences derived from PepGMV, and the other construct with heterologous sequences derived from ToChLPV. Plants protected with the heterologous construct showed an efficacy to decrease the severity of symptoms of 45%, while plants protected with the homologous construct showed an efficacy of 80%. Plants protected with the heterologous construct showed a reduction of incidence of 42.86%, while the reduction of incidence in plants protected with the homologous construct was 57.15%. The efficacy to decrease viral load was 95.6% in plants protected with the heterologous construct, and 99.56% in plants protected with the homologous construct. We found, in both constructs, up-regulated key components of the RNAi pathway. This demonstrates that the efficacy of the constructs was due to the activation of the gene silencing mechanism, and is reflected in the decrease of viral genome copies, as well as in recovery phenotype. We present evidence that both constructs are functional and can efficiently induce transient resistance against PepGMV infections. This observation guarantees a further exploration as a strategy to control complex Begomovirus diseases in the field.
This review focuses on the potential of halophytes for food, fodder and biofuels production, as well as their impacts on the environment and societies. Moreover, to open new areas in production systems using novel technologies such as halophytes in a desert agriculture. We are faced with the crisis and the shortage of freshwater in arid, semi-arid and desert regions. For this reason, we have to apply sustainable systems for human food, fodder and biofuels. Halophytes are naturally resistant to salt and develop on the coastal coast and arid-saline areas. We present a complete summary of the current situation of human population growth and food demand, a sustainable alternative such as halophilic crops of agro-industrial importance compared with conventional crops and how they can be incorporated into agriculture sustainable in arid, desert and coastal areas, basing the above on success stories.
Chile peppers are among the most common and important crops in the State of Baja California Sur, Mexico, where diverse varieties of this crop are annually cultivated. The “chile ancho” (Capsicum annuum L. var. ancho poblano) is one of the most popular hot peppers that is exported fresh to the United States. During a survey in December of 2007 in an experimental field of the CIBNOR in El Carrizal, one of the principal farm districts in the state, a high incidence of yellowing, stunted growth with shortened internodes, foliage discoloration, malformation and crinkle, abortion of flowers, and reduction in size and quantity of fruit were noted in chile ancho. Symptoms and the presence of large populations of whiteflies in the field suggested a possible viral etiology of disease. The symptoms of disease were successfully transmitted by grafting from field plants to tomato and pepper test plants. Samples from both field and test plants were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and molecular techniques. SEM study revealed groups of geminate particles characteristic of begomoviruses (Geminiviridae) in phloem tissue of randomly selected symptomatic plants (four field and two test plants). Total DNA from 12 symptomatic plants (eight naturally infected and four test plants) was obtained by a modified Dellaporta method and analyzed by PCR using the begomovirus universal primers prRepDGR (2) and prC889 (3). Amplicons of ~1.4 kb were obtained from all plant samples and PCR products from four of them were cloned into pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega, Madison, WI) and subsequently analyzed by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) using EcoRI and HinfI. Two distinct restriction fragment patterns were observed among the cloned PCR products, indicating the occurrence of at least two viruses in the infected plant tissues. The four examined samples contained the same two begomoviruses according to the RFLP analysis data. The complete sequence of the genomic component A of those viruses was determined by PCR amplification of viral DNA with universal, degenerate primers previously described (2), the subsequent cloning of overlapped PCR products, and sequencing. The full-length DNA-A sequence was assembled and compared with viral sequences available at the GenBank database using BlastN and the ClustalV alignment method (MegAlign; DNASTAR, Madison, WI). The 2,781-bp complete genome sequence of one co-infecting monopartite begomovirus (Accession No. HM459851) displayed the highest identity (99%) with Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV), isolate Guasave, Sinaloa (Accession No. FJ609655). The 2,609-bp DNA-A sequence of the second begomovirus exhibited the highest nucleotide identity (96%) with Tomato chino La Paz virus (ToChLPV)-[Baja California Sur] (Accession No. AY339619). The presence of TYLCV in this region of Mexico had not been previously reported nor was ToChLPV detected in pepper until now. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a mixed infection of pepper plants with TYLCV and a bipartite begomovirus in Baja California Peninsula. Since the high frequency of recombination events observed in begomovirus mixed infections involving TYLCV (1), it would be important to monitor the possible emergence of ToChLPV-TYLCV recombinants with higher potential virulence. References: (1) S. García-Andrés et al. Virology 365:210, 2007. (2) A. Mauricio-Castillo et al. Plant Dis. 91:1513, 2007. (3) S. D. Wyatt and J. K. Brown. Phytopathology 86:1288, 1996.
Changes in marine environments, including pH changes, have been correlated to alterations in the physiology and disease susceptibility of cultured organisms at the early stages of development. In this study, high-throughput sequencing of the V3-V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene was performed to evaluate the bacterial biodiversity of Crassostrea gigas pediveliger larvae and spat under acidic stress compared to that of larvae at normal pH value. The evaluation was performed in an experimental system with continuous water flow and pH manipulation by CO2 bubbling to simulate acidification (pH 7.38 ± 0.039), using the current ocean pH conditions (pH 8.116 ± 0.023) as a reference. The results indicated that the bacterial communities associated with both pediveliger larvae and spat were modified in response to acidic conditions. The families Rhodobacteraceae and Campylobacteraceae were the most affected by the change in pH, with increases in Vibrionaceae in pediveliger larvae and Planctomycetaceae and Phyllobacteriaceae in spat detected. The results of this study demonstrate that the bacterial communities associated with C. gigas pediveliger larvae and spat are responsive to changes in ocean acidification.
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