SummaryA cloned cDNA copy of the satellite RNA of groundnut rosette virus (GRV), labelled with either 32P or digoxigenin, was used as a probe to detect the satellite RNA in infected leaves. The test was successfully applied to N. benthamiana and to groundnuts, infected with isolates of GRV from East and West Africa and with isolates which cause different types of symptom in groundnuts, including one which is almost symptomless. Although the probe did not react with extracts from plants infected with GRV isolates from which the satellite RNA had been artificially eliminated, all naturally occurring GRV isolates contain the satellite RNA. The test therefore provides a reliable indicator of infection by GRV.
Maize and sugarcane are two economically important crops often grown in adjacent fields or co-cultivated in the northern guinea savannah agroecological zone, a major cereal production region of Nigeria. This study was conducted to determine the prevalence of mosaic disease in sugarcane and maize fields in the northern guinea savannah agroecological zone and to molecularly characterize the associated sugarcane mosaic virus (SCMV, genus Potyvirus) isolates. Surveys were conducted from June to July 2015, and sugarcane mosaic disease (SCMD) incidence was assessed across 21 farmer’s fields. Mean SCMD incidence varied across states with ∼82% (308/376), ∼66% (143/218), and ∼67% (36/54) recorded in Kaduna, Kano, and Katsina states, respectively. RT-PCR analysis of 415 field-collected samples using genus-specific primers confirmed potyvirus infection in 63.7% (156/245) of sugarcane, 29.7% (42/141) of maize crops, and 45% (13/29) of itch grass samples. Cloning and sequencing of gene-specific DNA amplicons from a subset of 45 samples (sugarcane = 33, maize = 9, itch grass = 3) confirmed their specificities to SCMV. Phylogenetic analysis of the partial gene sequences showed that they all belong to a single monophyletic clade of SCMV. These results were supported by analysis of complete polyprotein sequences of representative maize and sugarcane isolates from Nigeria. Both isolates shared 94.9%/97.3% complete polyprotein nucleotide (nt)/amino acid (aa) identities with each other and 75.2%/97.6% nt/aa identities with corresponding sequences of global SCMV isolates. The detection of identical populations of SCMV isolates in both crop species and a weed host suggests possible vector mediated interspecies spread within cereal landscapes in the study area with implications for the integrated and sustainable management of SCMD in cereal cropping systems in Nigeria.
The result showed that the people consuming these vegetables are at higher risk of boils, carbuncles, impetigo, infections of wounds and burns, breast abscesses, whitlow, osteomyelitis, bronchopneumonia, septicemia, bacteremia, acute endocarditis, food poisoning and scalded skin syndrome due to these bacterial populations.
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