info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo
Bean yellow mosaic virus infecting broad bean in the green belt of Córdoba, Argentina
Fecha
2019-04-11Autor
Rodriguez Pardina, Patricia
Nome Docampo, Claudia
Reyna, Pablo Gastón
Muñoz, Nacira Belen
Arguello Caro, Evangelina Beatriz
Luque, Andres Vicente
Debat, Humberto Julio
Resumen
Broad bean (Vicia faba L) is the fourth most important pulse crop in the world. In Argentina, broad
bean production was of 1,841 hectares and 16,500 tons during the 2017 growing season. Broad bean
is commonly used in rotations; especially by farmers located in “green belts” that are peri-urban
areas surrounding large cities that include horticultural family farms. Plants showing marked foliar
mosaic symptoms, typical of viral infection, were collected during the 2015 growing season in the
green belt of Córdoba city, Argentina. Preparations of symptomatic tissues were mechanically
inoculated onto healthy broad bean plants in the greenhouse, which developed symptoms similar to
those observed in the field. In addition, symptomatic samples were positive when tested by indirect
ELISA with the anti-potyvirus group monoclonal antibody. Further, flexuous filamentous particles
typical of potyviruses were observed under the electronic microscope on dip preparations. Lastly,
total RNA was extracted from a symptomatic leaf and high-throughput sequenced, which allowed
the assembly of a single virus sequence corresponding to a new highly divergent strain of Bean
yellow mosaic virus (BYMV). Phylogenetic insights clustered this Argentinean broad bean isolate
(BYMV-ARGbb) within group IX of BYMV. Given the economical importance of this virus and its
associated disease, the results presented here are a pivotal first step oriented to explore the eventual
incidence and epidemiological parameters of BYMV in broad bean in Argentina.