Abstract:
Tomato and chilli are economically important crops of Pakistan. Both
of these are necessary part of our daily diet in the form of vegetables,
salad and other culinary uses. Among biotic factors, the viruses are
considered as substantial limiting factors reducing yield and
deteriorating quality and quantity of tomato and chilli crops. The
potyviruses like Chilli veinal mottle virus (ChiVMV), Potato virus Y
(PVY), Pepper veinal mottle virus (PVMV), Pepper vein banding virus
(PVBV) and Tobacco etch virus (TEV) have been reported as
tremendous threats to the production of these crops worldwide including
Pakistan. Management of plant viruses depends upon rapid and specific
detection and identification, which is mostly facilitated by molecular
techniques like PCR/RT-PCR/NA hybridization. The Molecular data on
native Pakistani solanacious potyviruses was scare and their genetic
variability was unknown. So the present research was conducted to
determine the incidence, distribution and genetic variability based on
molecular characterization of Pakistani solanaceous Potyviruses. A total
of 2423 tomato and chilli leaf samples from 16 tomato and chilli
growing districts viz; Badin, Thatta, Umerkot, Hyderabad, Tandu
Allayar, Bahawalpur, Multan, Lodhran, Muzafargarh, Faisalabad,
Vehari, Rawalpindi, Attock, Chakwal, Sialkot, Sheikupura, Karak and
Loralai were collected in 2013-2014, of which only 920 samples were
positive for potyviruses by PTA ELISA. Of these positive samples, the
ChiVMV, PVY and ChiRSV were detected in 526, 323 and 71 samples
respectively. The overall incidence of Potyvirus, ChiVMV, PVY and
ChiRSV was recorded as 38%, 21.7%, 13.33% and 0.3% respectively.
20
The co-infections of ChiVMV and PVY was detected in 29 tomato
samples and 31 chilli samples. While, co-infection of ChiVMV and
ChiRSV and of ChiRSV and PVY in 18 and 24 chilli samples
respectively. The highest incidence was recorded from Lodhran,
Multan, Bahawalpur and Rawalpindi districts and the lowest from
Karak, Loralai, Sheikhupura and Mansehra districts. The sequences of
five ChiVMV, three PVY and 2 ChiRSV isolates were submitted to
genbank. The Pakistani isolates of ChiVMV shared nucleotide identities
of 90-97.5% with each other and 82.4-90.5% with other ChiVMV
isolates. The nucleotide sequences of PVY isolates were 98.699.1% to
each other and 98.2-99% with other PVY isolates. The ChiRSV isolates
were 98.4% identical to each other, while they shared 92.6-98.1%
identities with other ChiRSV isolates. The Pakistani isolates of
ChiVMV clustered and shared maximum nucleotide identities with
Indian isolates, while PVY and ChiRSV with chines isolates.