• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
virology blog

virology blog

About viruses and viral disease

potyvirus

TWiV 512: Flexuous SUMO wrestlers

23 September 2018 by Vincent Racaniello

Anne Simon joins the TWiV team to talk about plant viruses, including plum pox virus that devastates nut and stone fruit trees, and a geminivirus protein that regulates viral DNA synthesis.

Click arrow to play
Download TWiV 512 (62 MB .mp3, 103 min)
Subscribe (free): iTunes, Google Podcasts, RSS, email

Become a patron of TWiV!

Show notes at microbe.tv/twiv

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: dna replication, geminivirus, papaya ringspot virus, PCNA, plant virus, plum pox virus, potyvirus, recombination, rep protein, SUMO, viral, virology, virus, viruses

TWiV 343: The silence of the turnips

28 June 2015 by Vincent Racaniello

On episode #343 of the science show This Week in Virology, the TWiVerinoes discuss the potential for prion spread by plants, global circulation patterns of influenza virus, and the roles of Argonautes and a viral protein in RNA silencing in plants.

You can find TWiV #343 at www.microbe.tv/twiv.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: Ago, Arabidopsis thaliana, argonaute, chronic wasting disease, dicer, epidemiology, global circulation, H1N1, H3N2, HC-Pro, influenza virus, plant, potyvirus, prion, rna silencing, rnai, transmissible spongiform encephalopathy, turnip mosaic virus, viral, virology, virus

Tulips broken by viruses

14 March 2012 by Vincent Racaniello

three broken tulipsA consequence of the recent warm weather in the northeastern United States is the emergence of crocuses, an event that I documented at the TWiV Facebook page. A reader replied that it reminded her of the highly valued tulips with beautiful variegations produced by viruses.

In 17th-century Holland patterned tulips such as the Semper Augustus (image) were of enormous value, with single bulbs selling for 3000 guilders or more (about $1600 US today). The intricate lines and flame-like streaks produced stunning effects. We now know that these colorful patterns are caused by infection with potyviruses, which are filamentous plant viruses with positive-strand RNA genomes. The specific viruses involved are tulip-breaking virus, tulip top-breaking virus, tulip bandbreaking virus, and Rembrandt tulip-breaking virus. Lilies may also be patterned by infection with Lily mottle virus. These viruses infect the bulb and cause the single color to break, leading to bars, stripes, streaks, featherings or flame-like effects of different colors on the petals. These effects are caused by altered distribution of pigments in the petal caused by virus replication.

Unfortunately, infection with tulip-breaking viruses is not benign: with successive generations the bulb shrinks until it can no longer flower. For this reason most of the lines of broken tulips, including Semper Augustus, no longer exist. These viruses still circulate globally, transmitted by aphids. Because infection can cause costly damage to tulips, precautions must be taken to minimize spread. Contemporary variegated tulips such as Rem’s Sensation are produced by breeding, not virus infection.

Filed Under: Basic virology, Information Tagged With: plant, potyvirus, semper augustus, tulip breaking, viral, virology, virus

Primary Sidebar

by Vincent Racaniello

Earth’s virology Professor
Questions? virology@virology.ws

With David Tuller and
Gertrud U. Rey

Follow

Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram
Get updates by RSS or Email

Contents

Table of Contents
ME/CFS
Inside a BSL-4
The Wall of Polio
Microbe Art
Interviews With Virologists

Earth’s Virology Course

Virology Live
Columbia U
Virologia en Español
Virology 101
Influenza 101

Podcasts

This Week in Virology
This Week in Microbiology
This Week in Parasitism
This Week in Evolution
Immune
This Week in Neuroscience
All at MicrobeTV

Useful Resources

Lecturio Online Courses
HealthMap
Polio eradication
Promed-Mail
Small Things Considered
ViralZone
Virus Particle Explorer
The Living River
Parasites Without Borders

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.