Publications by authors named "P J Shiel"

ABSTRACT Sunflower mosaic is caused by a putative member of the family Potyviridae. Sunflower mosaic virus (SuMV) was characterized in terms of host range, physical and biological characteristics, and partial nucleotide and amino acid sequence. Cells infected with SuMV had cytoplasmic inclusion bodies typical of potyviruses.

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The requirements of sprouting dormant potato tubers for biological or serological assays or RNA extraction for nucleic acid and PCR assays add to the cost of virus screening. Recently, cheaper, reliable and more rapid methods for the screening of potato tuber-seed pieces for viruses have been developed that do not require sprouted tubers for indexing, including TaqMan real-time RT-PCR. Although the assays are often designed for minimal time and reagent use, they still require a time-consuming and laborious RNA extraction step.

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Totals of 960 and 286 certified potato seed lots from locations across North America were planted in trials in Washington and Oregon, respectively, in 2001 to 2003 and tested for strains of Potato virus Y (PVY). The incidence of PVY-infected lots averaged 16.4 and 25.

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Potato virus Y (PVY) has become a serious problem for the seed potato industry, with increased incidence and rejection of seed lots submitted for certification. New PVY strains and strain variants have emerged in recent decades in Europe and North America, including the PVY strain that causes veinal necrosis in tobacco, and strain variants that represent one or three recombination events between the common strain (PVY) and PVY. Several reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assays have been described that characterize PVY isolates as to strain type, but they are limited in their ability to detect some combinations of mixed strain infections.

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Potato virus Y (PVY) is a serious potato pathogen that affects potato seed and commercial production crops. In recent decades, novel PVY strains have been described that cause necrotic symptoms on tobacco foliage and/or potato tubers. The major PVY strains that affect potato include PVY(O) and PVY(N), which have distinct serotypes that can be differentiated by immunoassay.

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