The Systemic Infection by Tobacco Mosaic Virus of Tobacco Plants Coutaining the N Gene at Temperatures Below 28°C
1996
Tobacco plants containing the N-gene are occasionally systemically infected with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) at tempreratures below 28°C, but contain low concentrations of virus: they often fail to set seed, and can outlive healthy control plants. Infection is thus similar to that induced when N-gene tobacco plants are grafted onto systemically infected tobacco lacking the N-gene. Shoots from systemically infected N-gene plants can induce systemic infection in other graft-inoculated N-gene plants. Stem sections of N-gene tobacco plants act as good conduits for TMV between plants lacking the N-gene, and girdling experiments suggest that virus movement probably occurs in the phloern.
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