Vegetable Science
  • Year: 2010
  • Volume: 37
  • Issue: 2

Emergence of New Variant of Chilli Leaf Curl Virus in North India

  • Author:
  • Ved Prakash Rai1,2, Avinash Chandra Rai1, Sanjay Kumar1, Rajesh Kumar1, Sanjeet Kumar3, Major Singh1, Awadhesh Bahadur Rai1, Sheo Pratap Singh2
  • Total Page Count: 5
  • Page Number: 124 to 128

1Indian Institute of Vegetable Research, PB No. 01, PO-Jakhini, Varanasi, 221 305, India

2Department of Genetics and Plant Breeding, BHU, Varanasi, 221 005, India

3AVRDC-The World Vegetable Center/ICRISAT, BP-12404, Niamey, Niger

Online published on 20 May, 2016.

Abstract

The DNA from four leaf samples of Chilli Leaf Curl Virus (ChiLCV) symptomatic chilli plants collected from Varanasi, Mirzapur, Gorakhpur and Mahrajganj districts of Uttar Pradesh, India were isolated. Using coat protein gene (CP) specific primers, highly conserved coat protein regions of four isolates were amplified, sequenced and compared with 25 similar begomovirus sequences obtained from National Centre for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). The CP sequence identity of Varanasi isolate was 86% with Gorakhpur and Mirzapur isolates and 87% with Mahrajganj isolate. Phylogenetic relationships based on CP sequence similarity index grouped 29 sequences into three major clusters. The Gorakhpur, Mahrajganj and Mirzapur isolates were clustered together with tomato leaf curl Joydebpurvirus-[Kalyani] isolated from chilli, whereas Varanasi isolate clustered with chilli leaf curl virus-[Amritsar: Papaya] in a separate cluster. Thus, based on very low CP sequence identity between Varanasi isolate (ChiLCV-VNS) and other three isolates from Gorakhpur (ChiLCV-GKP), Mahrajganj (ChiLCV-MAH) and Mirzapur (ChiLCV-MZP), it is concluded that there is existence of a new variants of begomovirus, ChiLCV, infecting chilli crop in North India.