Liu S, Briddon R W, Bedford I D, Pinner M S, Markham P G
Department of Virus Research, John Innes Centre, Norwich, UK.
Virus Genes. 1999;18(1):5-11. doi: 10.1023/a:1008017017020.
The inability to transmit progeny virus resulting from the cloned components of an isolate of African cassava mosaic virus originating from Kenya (ACMV-K) has been shown to be due to defects in both genomic components. This was achieved by the production of infectious pseudorecombinants between ACMV-K and the cloned components of a whitefly-transmissible ACMV isolate originating from Nigeria (ACMV-NOg). The exchange of gene fragments between ACMV-K and ACMV-NOg has been used to demonstrate that the defects responsible for lack of transmissibility reside on the coat protein and DNA B C1 gene of ACMV-K. The significance of these finding with respect to the present understanding of the function of these gene products are discussed.
源自肯尼亚的非洲木薯花叶病毒分离株(ACMV-K)的克隆成分无法传播子代病毒,这已被证明是由于两个基因组成分均存在缺陷。这是通过在ACMV-K与源自尼日利亚的烟粉虱传播的ACMV分离株(ACMV-NOg)的克隆成分之间产生感染性假重组体实现的。ACMV-K和ACMV-NOg之间基因片段的交换已被用于证明导致缺乏传播性的缺陷存在于ACMV-K的外壳蛋白和DNA B C1基因上。讨论了这些发现对于目前对这些基因产物功能理解的意义。