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ARS Home » Pacific West Area » Corvallis, Oregon » Horticultural Crops Research Unit » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #248614

Title: A New Member of the Family Reoviridae May Contribute to Severe Crumbly Fruit in Red Raspberry, Rubus idaeus 'Meeker'

Author
item QUITO, D - Oregon State University
item JELKMANN, W - Julius Kuhn Institute
item ALT, S - Julius Kuhn Institute
item LIEBLE, S - Julius Kuhn Institute
item Martin, Robert

Submitted to: International Conference on Graft Transmissible Diseases of Fruit Crops
Publication Type: Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/4/2009
Publication Date: 8/24/2010
Citation: Quito, D., Jelkmann, W., Alt, S., Lieble, S., Martin, R.R. 2010. A new member of the family Reoviridae may contribute to severe crumbly fruit in red raspberry, Rubus idaeus 'Meeker'. International Conference on Graft Transmissible Diseases of Fruit Crops. Available: http://icvf.jki.bund.de/

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: A virus induced crumbly fruit disease of considerable importance in 'Meeker' and other cultivars of red raspberry has been observed in northern Washington, USA, and British Columbia, Canada and to a lesser extent in the Willamette Valley of Oregon. Raspberry bushy dwarf virus (RBDV), a pollen-borne virus, has been considered the causal agent of the disease. However, dsRNA extractions from raspberry plants exhibiting severe crumbly fruit in northern Washington revealed multiple bands in addition to those corresponding to RBDV (5.5kb and 2.2kb). Sequence analyses of these dsRNAs showed the presence of two additional viruses. One has significant amino acid identity to proteins encoded by Rice ragged stunt virus (RRSV), a ten-segmented dsRNA Oryzavirus that belongs to the family Reoviridae. Thus far, all dsRNA segments, except the one that corresponds to S6 of RRSV, have been fully sequenced and found to have characteristic features of other plant reoviruses genomes. In addition, Raspberry leaf mottle virus (RLMV), a recently characterized member of the Closteroviridae, has also been identified from raspberries with severe crumbly fruit. These findings along with the lack of severe crumbly fruit symptoms in ‘Meeker’ red raspberry singly infected with RBDV in Oregon, suggest the existence of a novel virus complex associated with severe crumbly fruit in red raspberries. The complex may involve RBDV, RLMV and/or this new reovirus, provisionally named Raspberry latent virus(RpLV).