Mervat M. Fathallah’s research while affiliated with Plant Pathology Research Institute and other places

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Publications (1)


Symptoms of natural infection of AMV on A potato, B tomato, C alfalfa and D clover
A Necrotic local lesions developed on C. amaranticolor leaves 7 days after inoculation with AM2. B Systemic symptoms on C. amaranticolor developed 25 days after inoculation with AM2. C Chlorotic local lesions developed on C. amaranticolor leaves 7 days after inoculation with AM1, AM3 and AM4. D Systemic symptoms on C. amaranticolor developed 25 days after inoculation with AM1, AM3 and AM4. E Reaction of N. glutinosa to infection with AM2, mottling on leaves, 15 days following leaf deformation, 35 days after inoculation. F N. glutinosa with infection by AM1, AM3, and AM4, mosaic symptoms developed 15 days after inoculation, followed by stunting
One percent agarose gel electrophoresis analysis of AMV CP gene amplicons obtained by RT‒PCR from mechanically inoculated N. glutinosa leaves. M: 100 bp DNA Ladder (GeneDireX, Inc.); lane 1: uninfected healthy N. glutinosa plant; lane 2: isolate AM1; lane 3: isolate AM2; lane 4: isolate AM3; and lane 5: isolate AM4. 'Full-length gel is presented in Additional file 1', Fig. 3
SSCP patterns of RT‒PCR products of all tested AMV isolates; lane 1: AM1 isolate; lane 2: AM2 isolate; lane 3: AM3 isolate, and lane 4: AM4 isolate. 'Full-length blot is presented in Additional file 1, Fig. 4
Rooted circular cladogram showing the phylogenetic tree of the AMV CP gene sequences of Egyptian isolates, including the current isolates (AM1, AM2, AM3 and AM4) and GenBank worldwide reference isolates. The neighbor-joining (NJ) phylogenetic tree was constructed using QIAGEN CLC Genomics Workbench software at 1000 bootstrap repetitions

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Molecular characterization and evolution of the resident population of some alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV) isolates in Egypt
  • Article
  • Full-text available

September 2023

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142 Reads

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3 Citations

BMC Microbiology

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Radwa M. Shafie

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Mervat M. Fathallah

Background Alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV) is an important virus affecting many vegetable crops in Egypt. In this study, virus isolates were collected from naturally infected potato, tomato, alfalfa and clover plants that showed suspected symptoms of AMV in different locations of Beheira and Alexandria governorates during the 2019–2020 growing season. The relative incidence of the virus ranged from 11–25% based on visual observations of symptoms and ELISA testing. A total of 41 samples were tested by ELISA using polyclonal antisera for AMV. Four AMV isolates collected from different host plants, named AM1 from potato, AM2 from tomato, AM3 from alfalfa and AM4 from alfalfa, were maintained on Nicotiana glutinosa plants for further characterization of AMV. Results Electron micrographs of the purified viral preparation showed spheroidal particles with a diameter of 18 nm and three bacilliform particles with lengths of roughly 55, 68, and 110 nm and diameters identical to those of the spheroidal particles. The CP gene sequence comparisons of four AMV isolates (AM1, AM2, AM3 and AM4) showed the highest nucleotide identity of 99.7% with the Gomchi isolate from South Korea infecting Gomchi (Ligularia fischeri) plants. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the present isolates were grouped together into a distinct separate clade (GPI) along with the Gomchi isolate from South Korea. Similarly, the deduced amino acid sequence comparisons of Egyptian AMV isolates revealed that amino acids Q²⁹, S³⁰, T³⁴, V⁹² and V¹⁷⁵ were conserved among the Egyptian isolates in GPI. Conclusion The present study found strong evolutionary evidence for the genetic diversity of AMV isolates by the identification of potential recombination events involving parents from GPI and GPII lineages. Additionally, the study found that Egyptian AMV isolates are genetically stable with low nucleotide diversity. Genetic analysis of the AMV population suggested that the AMV populations differ geographically, and AMV CP gene is under mild purifying selection. Furthermore, the study proposed that the Egyptian AMV population had common evolutionary ancestors with the Asian AMV population. Antioxidant enzymes activity was assessed on N. glutinosa plants in response to infection with each AMV isolate studied, and the results revealed that the enzyme activity varied.

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Citations (1)


... Periwinkle serves as a secondary host for Alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV) and acts as a reservoir for the virus when the primary crop is absent. In Egypt, AMV was initially detected and confirmed serologically in broad bean and basil (El-Attar et al., 1971 andShafie et al., 1997), and recently, it was molecularly identified in basil, pepper and potato, tomato, alfalfa and clover plants (El-Attar et al., 2019, El-Ganainy et al., 2023and Amin et al., 2023 respectively. Symptoms induced by the virus include distinct bright yellow blotches accompanied by vein banding and chlorosis, ultimately leading to bronzing of the leaves. ...

Reference:

Molecular Identification of Alfalfa Mosaic Virus and Utilization of Lactoferrin Against Viral Infection in Periwinkle Plants
Molecular characterization and evolution of the resident population of some alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV) isolates in Egypt

BMC Microbiology