Seed lots of tomato and capsicum ( and , respectively) are required to be free of quarantine pests before their entry to Australia is permitted. Testing of samples from 118 larger seed lots in the period 2019-2021 revealed that 31 (26.3%) carried one or more of four species, including tomato mottle mosaic virus (ToMMV), which is a quarantine pest for Australia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnalyses of pospiviroids in commercial seed lots of tomato and capsicum, determined by testing of 12,000 to 40,000 seeds per lot, have enabled the development of empirically-derived distribution curves for the observed prevalences of viroids in those commodities. Those distribution curves can be considered in conjunction with statistically-based estimates of detection that would be achieved using other sample sizes. Statistical calculations using binomial distributions show that sample sizes of 3000 and 9400 seeds allow detection of viroid prevalences as low as 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis report describes the first production of recombinant forms of Heliothis (Helicoverpa) armigera entomopoxvirus (HaEPV). These HaEPVs are engineered at either the spheroidin or fusolin locus, to produce the green fluorescent marker protein (GFP). The growth properties of these recombinant HaEPVs, in comparison to the parental HaEPV, were assessed in cultured Spodoptera frugiperda Sf9 cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral groups of large DNA viruses successfully utilise the rich resource provided by insect hosts. Defining the mechanisms that enable these pathogens to optimise their relationships with their hosts is of considerable scientific and practical importance, but our understanding of the processes involved is, as yet, rudimentary. Here we describe an informatics-based approach that uses comparison of viral genomic sequences to identify candidate genes likely to be specifically involved in this process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunoelectron microscopy has shown that morphogenesis of spindle bodies (SB) of Heliothis armigera entomopoxvirus involves an iterative process of condensation, aggregation, and crystallization of the major constituent protein (fusolin) within the perinuclear space and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of infected cells and in vesicles derived from ER constituents. The ER-specific chaperone BiP has been observed to be associated with developing SBs at all stages of this process, and it is postulated that its sequestration within these bodies may have consequences for host cell metabolism.
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