Abstract:Large leaf gentian, Gentiana macrophylla Pall., known as Qin Jiao in Chinese, is a medicinal herb. Its root is most commonly used in Chinese traditional medicine to relieve rheumatic conditions and to remove damp-heat. During a survey in July 2009, large leaf gentian plants exhibiting foliar chlorotic and necrotic spots as well as severe stunting were collected in Lijiang County, Yunnan Province of China. Incidence of symptomatic plants ranged from 10 to 30% in the field. Symptomatic leaves from five different… Show more
“…In the early 1990s, INSV was first identified in the United States and the Netherlands as Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV)-like virus, but later was classified as a new species Law and Moyer 1990;Law et al 1991). Since then, INSV has been detected in many countries worldwide, including the UK, Austria, and China (Crosslin and Hamlin 2010;Ding et al 2011;GrausgruberGröger 2012;Yin et al 2011;Zhang et al 2010). In Japan, this viral infection was first recorded in Shizuoka Prefecture, which is centrally located in the Honshu region, in 1998 (Doi and Kato 2003), and subsequently in Akita and Okayama Prefectures in 1999 (Fuji and Yamamoto 2000;Tanina et al 2001), and eventually spread throughout Honshu and other regions of the country (Fig.…”
Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV), belonging to the genus Tospovirus, causes severe damage to greenhouse ornamental plants. We conducted population genetic analyses of INSV isolated from various greenhouse flowers in Iwate Prefecture as a model to elucidate how the virus invaded and spread within a local area of Japan. Forty-two and 30 sequences of the nucleocapsid protein gene (NG) and intergenic regions (IGR), respectively, of the small RNA of the virus were generated from 42 isolates collected from seven greenhouses in three districts, and then they were divided into 10 NG haplotypes and 13 IGR haplotypes. A combined haplotype analysis for the two loci revealed the presence of 14 NG/IGR haplotypes in the region. Genetic structure of the INSV population based on the NG sequences was differentiated according to districts and greenhouses, and 3 major NG haplotypes were predominant in each district. Genetic analysis based on IGR sequences showed that the population structure in some greenhouses consisted of 1 major IGR haplotype and some minor haplotypes with the same NG haplotype. Phylogenetic analysis based on NG and IGR sequences illustrated that INSV haplotypes were clustered according to geographic origin, including the isolates previously reported in Japan and other countries. Host species did not seem to influence the genetic structure of the INSV population. These results suggest that some founder isolates were introduced individually from other epidemic regions to each district in the region through different routes and then spread within the local areas and greenhouses.
“…In the early 1990s, INSV was first identified in the United States and the Netherlands as Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV)-like virus, but later was classified as a new species Law and Moyer 1990;Law et al 1991). Since then, INSV has been detected in many countries worldwide, including the UK, Austria, and China (Crosslin and Hamlin 2010;Ding et al 2011;GrausgruberGröger 2012;Yin et al 2011;Zhang et al 2010). In Japan, this viral infection was first recorded in Shizuoka Prefecture, which is centrally located in the Honshu region, in 1998 (Doi and Kato 2003), and subsequently in Akita and Okayama Prefectures in 1999 (Fuji and Yamamoto 2000;Tanina et al 2001), and eventually spread throughout Honshu and other regions of the country (Fig.…”
Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV), belonging to the genus Tospovirus, causes severe damage to greenhouse ornamental plants. We conducted population genetic analyses of INSV isolated from various greenhouse flowers in Iwate Prefecture as a model to elucidate how the virus invaded and spread within a local area of Japan. Forty-two and 30 sequences of the nucleocapsid protein gene (NG) and intergenic regions (IGR), respectively, of the small RNA of the virus were generated from 42 isolates collected from seven greenhouses in three districts, and then they were divided into 10 NG haplotypes and 13 IGR haplotypes. A combined haplotype analysis for the two loci revealed the presence of 14 NG/IGR haplotypes in the region. Genetic structure of the INSV population based on the NG sequences was differentiated according to districts and greenhouses, and 3 major NG haplotypes were predominant in each district. Genetic analysis based on IGR sequences showed that the population structure in some greenhouses consisted of 1 major IGR haplotype and some minor haplotypes with the same NG haplotype. Phylogenetic analysis based on NG and IGR sequences illustrated that INSV haplotypes were clustered according to geographic origin, including the isolates previously reported in Japan and other countries. Host species did not seem to influence the genetic structure of the INSV population. These results suggest that some founder isolates were introduced individually from other epidemic regions to each district in the region through different routes and then spread within the local areas and greenhouses.
In 2016, less than 30% of virus-like symptoms such as chlorosis, necrosis and ringspots were observed in Hoya carnosa from commercial greenhouse in Eumseong, Korea. A total of 6 samples from Hoya carnosa were collected both symptomatic and asymptomatic plants and tested for virus infection by RT-PCR of 3 viruses known to infect Hoya spp. including Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV), Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV) and Tomato chlorotic spot virus (TCSV). Three symptomatic samples were positives for INSV. Also, it was not the virus detected in three asymptomatic samples. To further confirm the presence of INSV, complete nucleocapsid (N) gene of the virus were amplified and sequenced from two samples. BLAST analysis of the consensus sequence showed that two isolates (INSV-Hy1 and-Hy2) shared nucleotide sequence identities of 99% with each other and 97-99% with other INSV isolates available in the GenbBank. Phylogenetic analysis showed that these isolates closely related to the INSV isolates from ornamental from China. This is the first report of INSV on Hoya carnosa from Korea.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.