Publications by authors named "Giovanna Mason"

The capsid protein (CP) of the monopartite begomovirus Tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus (TYLCSV), family Geminiviridae, is indispensable for plant infection and vector transmission. A region between amino acids 129 and 152 is critical for virion assembly and insect transmissibility. Two previously described mutants, one with a double Q129P Q134H mutation (PNHD) and another with a further D152E change (PNHE), were found nontransmissible (NT).

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ABSTRACT Tomato hybrids obtained from homozygous progeny of line 30-4, engineered for Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) resistance, were tested under field conditions in two locations with their corresponding nontransgenic hybrids. No transgenic hybrid became infected, but 33 to 50% of plants of each nontransgenic hybrid became infected with a severe reduction of marketable fruit production. The transgenic hybrids conformed to the standard agronomic characteristics of the corresponding nontransgenic ones.

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Tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus (TYLCSV) (Geminiviridae) is an important pathogen severely affecting tomato production in the Mediterranean basin. Although diagnostic protocols are available for its detection in plants and its vector Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius), suitable tools for estimating and comparing viral loads in plant and insect tissues are needed. In this paper, real-time PCR methods are described for quantitation of TYLCSV in both tomato plant and whitefly extracts.

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A method for rapid and reliable detection of Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) (Tospovirus, Bunyaviridae) in its vector Frankliniella occidentalis (Thysanoptera Thripidae) would be a useful tool for studying the epidemiology of this virus. A RT-PCR method developed for this purpose is reported. The method was tested on thrips involved in laboratory transmission trials and on thrips collected in the field, whose capability to transmit TSWV was checked previously by leaf disk assays.

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Background: When generating transformed plants, a first step in their characterization is to obtain, for each new line, an estimate of how many copies of the transgene have been integrated in the plant genome because this can deeply influence the level of transgene expression and the ease of stabilizing expression in following generations. This task is normally achieved by Southern analysis, a procedure that requires relatively large amounts of plant material and is both costly and labour-intensive. Moreover, in the presence of rearranged copies the estimates are not correct.

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DNA extraction and storage methods have been evaluated with laboratory-reared leafhoppers and/or field-collected leafhoppers and psyllids. Detection of four different phytopathogenic phytoplasmas, belonging to three taxonomic groups, has been achieved by several direct or nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) methods with such DNA extracts. Reactions differed in both the 16/23S ribosomal primer pairs used and the specific assay and cycling conditions.

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