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Review
. 1988 Oct 31;321(1207):447-62.
doi: 10.1098/rstb.1988.0102.

Molecular variation in vector-borne plant viruses: epidemiological significance

Affiliations
Review

Molecular variation in vector-borne plant viruses: epidemiological significance

B D Harrison et al. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. .

Abstract

Patterns of variation are examined in four groups of plant viruses, with special reference to their particle proteins and to changes in vector transmissibility and specificity. In the nepoviruses and potyviruses, non-circulative transmission, by nematodes and aphids respectively, seems dependent on structural features on the surface of the virus particles. The N-terminal part of the particle protein may play the key role in potyviruses. Similarly in the luteoviruses, and possibly in the geminiviruses, specificity of circulative transmission by aphids, whiteflies and leafhoppers is linked to the antigenic specificity of the virus particles. Among naturally occurring isolates of the same virus, variation seems often to be discontinuous, and is predominantly of two sorts. Minor variations, characterized by loss of an epitope or substitutions of a few amino acids, can be associated with loss of transmissibility in luteoviruses and potyviruses, or have no effect. Major variations are associated with differences in vector specificity and seem likely to involve radical genetic changes that have evolved over long periods. The adaptation of virus particle proteins for transmission by vectors probably results in conservation of the genes that encode them, and in greater conservation of some parts of these genes than of others.

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