Friday, February 27, 2026

Plant Viral Diseases

 

Tomato Yellow Leaf Curl Virus (TYLCV) is a major problem on tomato. Once the disease has occurred, it will spread fast and drastically reduce the yield.

Symptoms of infection yellowing of young leaves, upward and downward leaf curl , stunting, bushy appearance, and flower drop, which occurs prior to fruit set and dramatically reduces fruit yield.

Affected plants tend to be distributed in isolated patches. This virus can cause significant yield losses from 80-100%

Pathogen

TYLCV is of the genus Begomovirus and family Geminiviridae.

Figure 1. Symptomatic tomato plant infected with TYLCV. Note the leaf curl.Figure 2. Interveinal and marginal chlorosis on young tomato leaves infected with TYLCV

Leaf curl & Interveinal and marginal chlorosis on young tomato leaves infected with TYLCV

Host Plants

TYLCV predominately causes disease in tomatoes. It can infect other hosts in the Solanaceae family (pepper, eggplant, potato, tobacco, jimsonweed), as well as common bean (Phaseolis vulgaris L.), and ornamentals including petunia and lisianthus. In the absence of symptoms, these hosts may serve as a reservoir of the pathogen.

Signs and Symptoms

On tomatoes, the primary symptoms of TYLCV are interveinal and marginal chlorosis of young leaves, an overall crumpled appearance of the leaves, and upward and downward leaf-curling. Plants infected with TYLCV will also be stunted in height and appear bushy due to shortened internode length. Flower drop will occur with an accompanying reduction in yield. When young plants are infected, the disease may be so severe that no fruit is produced. Symptoms can take up to three weeks to develop after infection.

  

Look-alike conditions

Initial symptoms of TYLCV can resemble other disorders that affect tomatoes, including potassium deficiency, magnesium deficiency, micronutrient deficiencies, and leaf curl. In general, any of these nutrient deficiencies are likely to be consistent across the entire crop whereas plants infected with TYLCV will be patchy across the field and not uniform. This pattern may be used to help diagnose the problem. TYLCV differs from symptoms of nutrient deficiencies in that the marginal and interveinal chlorosis first appears on young leaves. Curling of new leaves may also be caused by excessive aphid feeding or other viruses. It is highly recommended to confirm the diagnosis by a plant disease clinic or extension specialist since there are several lookalike diseases and disorders.

Disease Cycle and Epidemiology

TYLCV is transmitted by adult whiteflies (Bemisia tabaci). A whitefly can acquire the virus within their salivary glands after 15-30 minutes of feeding on an infected plant. After a latent period (time between acquisition and transmission of virus) of ~6 hours, the whitefly is able to transmit the virus to another plant within 15-30 minutes of feeding. Adult whiteflies can retain and spread the virus for several weeks after initially feeding on infected plants and can travel over distances of at least 10 miles.

The virus has been detected on seed collected from infected plants. Yet, the virus survives only on the surface of the seed and is not transmissible to seedlings following seed-surface disinfestation. 

Following infection it may take up to three weeks for symptoms on tomato to appear due to the movement of symptomless infected plant material spreading the disease over long distances. A high population of white flies in mature stages of field-grown tomato production may serve as an inoculum source for younger plantings nearby.

Bemisia tabaci

 General Disease Management

  • ·       Use disease resistant cultivars
  • ·       Destroy old infested crop after harvest.
  • ·       Raise barrier crops – cereals (3 rows of sorghum, cumbu and maize) around the field.
  • ·       Remove weeds as these may harbour the virus.
  • ·       Adopt polythene mulching technology during planting to control weed hosts.
  • ·       Physically protect the nursery from the vector, e.g. net house or green house.
  • ·       Keep yellow sticky traps to monitor the white fly.
  • ·       Spray insecticides to control the vector.


Banana Bunchy Top

Banana bunchy top is a viral disease caused by a single-stranded DNA virus -banana bunchy top virus (BBTV), of the family Nanoviridae. It is aphid transmitted and infects banana plants and other crops. It was first identified in Fiji in 1879.

BBTV was named after the symptoms seen, where the infected plants are stunted and have "bunchy" leaves at the top. The disease is transmitted from plant-to-plant in tropical regions of the world by banana aphids, which is an important factor in control of the disease.

There are no resistant varieties, so controlling the spread by vectors and plant materials are the only management methods.

Host

Banana bunchy top disease affects the banana fruit and foliage. BBTV can infect species of the family Musaceae, which includes bananas, plantains, abaca, and more. The aphids also feed on Heliconia and flowering ginger.

Symptom

The pathogen causes cytopathological effects in the phloem tissue, due to damage of the host cells by the virus. The name of the disease is due to the symptom in older plants, in which the new leaves that are produced are narrower than normal, yellow, and flat, which causes a "bunchy" appearance at the top of the tree

If any fruit is produced, which is unusual, it will be deformed. One of the most distinctive symptoms is "Morse code streaking" causing irregular spots and dashes on the leaves which are easier to see when the waxy coating over the petiole is rubbed away. The infected cells die and are lighter in color hence this appearance.

Initially, dark green streaks appears in the veins of lower portion of the leaf midrib and the leaf stem. They appear to be “bunched” at the top of the plant, the symptom for which this disease is named. Severely infected banana plants usually will not fruit, but if fruit is produced, the banana hands and fingers are likely to be distorted and twisted. 

 

 

 Disease cycle

BBTV is the sole member of the genus Babuvirus in the family Nanoviridae.

It is known that Banana aphid (Pentalonia nigronervosa) transmits the virus from infected to healthy plants by feeding. Aphids feed on the plant phloem tissues by injecting their thin, flexible stylet into the epidermis of the plant tissue until it reaches the phloem of the leaves. Then the aphid injects saliva, sucks the cell contents and introduces virus in the process.

Vector transmission of the BBTV is non-propagative, and the virus does not replicate within the aphid’s midgut. Acquisition of the virus by the banana aphid requires about 18 hours of feeding and then the aphid can retain the virus for approximately two weeks. It takes about a month for the BBTV symptoms to appear after infection.

 To infect, the carrier aphid can feed on the banana plant for as few as 15 minutes, but more often a couple hours, as the longer feeding time will increase the odds of transmission. The suckers produced on infected plants will also be diseased thus the disease can spread from year to year.

Banana aphids also have the capability to feed on Heliconia and flowering ginger; however, these alternate hosts of the aphid vector are not hosts of the virus. The ability of banana aphids to feed on alternate hosts is important to keep in mind when attempting to control the virus.

 Management

  • There are no resistant varieties of banana against BBTV, so the most common method of control is chemical control of the aphid vectors.
  • Another way to help control the virus is to remove and destroy any infected plants before the virus can spread, which is a practice known as roguing.
  •  Quarantines are also implemented to prevent the import of any potentially infected plant materials
  • Fruit is not often produced on infected plants, but if it is, the fruit will be deformed, which easily identifies if there is any virus present in the fruits to comply with quarantine regulations.
  • Since bananas are not the only host, the alternate hosts for both the virus and the aphid must also be monitored for disease, and sprayed with pesticides to control the aphids more.
  • When planting at the beginning of the season, the seed material or suckers should be obtained from BBTV free areas of the world or from cultures that are grown and developed to be free of the virus.
  • Control of banana bunchy top is achieved by killing the banana aphids then destroying all infected material. First, the aphids should be killed on the infected banana material, and then all the plant material should be destroyed to prevent the spread of the virus. 

Importance

Banana bunchy top disease is the most serious virus disease of banana worldwide. Diseased plants rarely produce fruit and when they do, the fruit is stunted and twisted.

BBTV certainly has a huge impact on the industrial scale of banana production and affects the livelihood of farmers.

Once established, it is very difficult to eradicate and manage the disease. 

First of all, the disease is caused by a vector-transmitted virus and this virus is not completely understood yet. Secondly, all bananas are susceptible to the disease and no resistant varieties have been discovered or made commercially available. Lastly, the control methods are quite demanding, including chemical treatment for the aphid vectors, removal of all infected tissue, quarantining plants and monitoring alternate vector feeding sites.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Epistasis, Pleiotropy

 EPISTASIS 

In epistasis, the interaction between two genes is antagonistic, such that one gene masks or interferes with the expression of another. “Epistasis” is a word composed of Greek roots that mean “standing upon.” The alleles that are being masked or silenced are said to be hypostatic to the epistatic alleles that are doing the masking. Often the biochemical basis of epistasis is a gene pathway in which the expression of one gene is dependent on the function of a gene that precedes or follows it in the pathway.

 The phenomena where the effect of one gene depends on the presence of one or more gene, is known as epistasis. The phenotypic effect of one gene is masked by another gene. The gene which masks the effect of another gene is known as epistatic gene. The epistatic genes can be dominant or recessive in their effects and the gene whose effect is masked by the epistatic gene is known as hypostatic gene.

By the definition, confusion arises between the dominance and epistasis but dominance involves intra-allelic gene interaction and one allele hides the effect of other allele at the same gene pair, whereas in epistasis it involves inter-allelic gene interaction i.e. one gene hides the effect of other gene at other gene loci.

For the study of linkage association analysis, epistasis plays an important role. Epistatic mutations therefore have different effects on their own than when they occur together. Epistasis has a great influence on the evolvability of phenotypic traits.

 

TYPES OF EPISTASIS

 Dominant Epistasis When a dominant allele hides the effect of allele of another gene and expresses and itself phenotypically, is known as the dominant epistasis. The hypostatic allele will only get expressed when the gene locus contains two recessive alleles. The expression of one dominant or recessive allele is masked by another dominant gene. This is also referred to as simple epistasis.

An example of dominant epistasis is found for fruit colour in summer squash. There are three types of fruit colors - white, yellow and green. White colour is controlled by dominant gene W and yellow colour by dominant gene G. White is dominant over both yellow and green. The green fruits are produced in recessive condition (wwgg). 

A cross between plants having white and yellow fruits produced F1 with white fruits. Intermating of F1 plants produced plants with white, yellow and green coloured fruits in F2 in 12:3:1 ratio.

Intergenic gene interactions - Botany: Classical Genetics

FIG- The figure explains the dominant epistasis for fruit colour in summer squash. The normal dihybrid modified to12:3:1 in F2 generation. Here W is dominant to w and epistatic to alleles G and g. Hence it will mask the expression of G/g alleles. Hence in F2, plants with W-G-(9/16) and W-gg (3/16) genotypes will produce white fruits; plants with wwG-(3/16) will produce yellow fruits and those with wwgg (1/16) genotype will produce green fruits. Thus the normal dihybrid ratio 9:3:3:1 is modified to 12:3: 1 ratio in F2 generation.

Similar type of gene interaction has been reported for skin color in mice and seed coat color in barley.


 Recessive Epistasis

The recessive allele of one gene locus hides the effect of another gene locus and expresses itself phenotypically. When recessive alleles at one locus mask the expression of both (dominant and recessive) alleles at another locus, it is known as recessive epistasis.

An example of recessive epistasis is pigmentation in mice. The wild-type coat color, agouti (AA), is dominant to solid-colored fur (aa). However, a separate gene (C) is necessary for pigment production. A mouse with a recessive c allele at this locus is unable to produce pigment and is albino regardless of the allele present at locus A (Figure 1). Therefore, the genotypes AAccAacc, and aacc all produce the same albino phenotype. A cross between heterozygotes for both genes (AaCc x AaCc) would generate offspring with a phenotypic ratio of 9 agouti:3 solid color:4 albino

In this case, the c gene is epistatic to the A gene.

 

A cross between two agouti mice with the heterozygous genotype AaCc is shown. Each mouse produces four different kinds of gametes (AC, aC, Ac, and ac). A 4 × 4 Punnett square is used to determine the genotypic ratio of the offspring. The phenotypic ratio is 9/16 agouti, 3/16 black, and 4/16 white.

 

A-C-  agouti          A-C- Black                A-cc white

Another good example of such gene interaction is found for grain colour in maize. There are three colours of grain in maize, viz., purple, red and white. The purple colour develops in the presence of two dominant genes (R and P), red colour in the presence of a dominant gene R, and white in homozygous recessive condition (rrpp). A cross between purple (RRPP) and white (rrpp) grain colour strains of maize produced plants with purple colour in F1. Inter-mating of these F1 plants produced progeny with purple, red and white grains in F2 in the ratio of 9:3:4.

 Recessive epistasis for grain colour in maize.    RRPP x rrpp

The normal dihybrid segregation ratio 9:3:3:1 is modified to 9:3:4 in F2 generation. Here allele r is recessive to R, but epistatic to alleles P and p. In F2, all plants with R-P-(9/16) will have purple grains and those with R-pp genotypes (3/16) have red grain color. The epistatic allele r in homozygous condition will produce plants with white grains from rrP-(3/16) and rrpp (1/16) genotypes. Thus, the normal segregation ratio of 9:3:3:1 is modified to 9:3:4 in F2 generation.

 Such type of gene interaction is also found for coat color in mice, bulb color in onion and for certain characters in many other organisms.

 

Pleiotropism

 Pleiotropism is the condition in which a single gene controls more than one phenotypic effect, that is completely unrelated.  Pleiotropy is a condition in which a single gene has multiple phenotypic expressions.

E.g.: Phenylketonuria It is an autosomal recessive disorder due to problem in chromosome number 12 

When the phenylalanine levels are affected, it causes a disease known as phenylketonuria- due to the defect in single gene present on chromosome 12 which codes for the phenylalanine hydroxylase. Phenylalanine is an essential amino acid obtained from food and causes multiple effects such as mental retardation, hypopigmentation of hair and skin.


 

 Other examples of the pleiotropy are albinism, sickle cell anemia, autism, etc. Pleitropy not only affects humans but also its affect is seen in the animals as well like, chicken, mice, etc.

• Sickle cell disease is caused by a problem in the hemoglobin-beta gene found on chromosome 11. The defect forms abnormal hemoglobin.

 

 


 

 

Saturday, February 21, 2026

STAINING SPECIFIC STRUCTURES

     Many special staining procedures have been developed to study specific structures with the light microscope. They are Capsule staining, Negative staining, Endospore staining & Flagellar staining

  Capsule staining

Some bacteria have a layer of material lying outside the cell wall. When the layer is well organized and not easily washed off, it is called a capsule or glycocalyx. A glycocalyx is a network of polysaccharides/polypeptides extending from the surface of bacteria. Capsules help bacteria resist phagocytosis by host phagocytic cells. The glycocalyx also aids bacterial attachment to surfaces of solid objects in aquatic environments or to tissue surfaces in plant.

Example: Bacillus anthracis has a capsule of poly- D- glutamic acid. Streptococcus pneumoniae, Klebsiella pneumoniae Haemophilus influenzae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa have capsules.

Capsules are clearly visible in the light microscope when negative stains or special capsule stains are employed.

 Principle:

Bacterial capsules are non-ionic, so neither acidic nor basic stains will adhere to their surfaces.  Therefore, the best way to visualize them is to stain the background using an acidic stain (e.g., Nigrosine, Congo red) and to stain the cell itself using a basic stain (e.g. Crystal violet, safranin, basic fuchsin and methylene blue).

 

There are two methods:

A. Indian ink method (Negative Staining)

B. Anthony’s stain method

 

  A. Indian ink method (Negative Staining):  

In this method two dyes, crystal violet and Indian ink are used.

The capsule is seen as a clear halo around the microorganism against the black background.

The background will be dark (color of Indian ink).

The bacterial cells will be stained purple (bacterial cells takes crystal violet-basic dyes as they are negatively charged).

Observation: The capsule (if present) will appear clear against the dark background (capsule does not take any stain).

 


 

 B. Anthony’s stain method:

In this type of capsule staining procedure, the primary stain is crystal violet, and all parts of the cell take up the purple crystal violet stain.

There is no mordant in the capsule staining procedure.

A 20% copper sulfate solution serves a dual role as both the decolorizing agent and counter stain.

It decolorizes the capsule by washing out the crystal violet, but will not decolorize the cell.

As the copper sulfate decolorizes the capsule, it also counterstains the capsule. 

Observation:  the capsule appears as a blue halo around a purple cell.

 


 

Negative staining

 Negative staining requires the use of an acidic stain such as India ink or Nigrosin. The acidic stain, with its negatively charged chromogen, will not penetrate the cells because of the negative charge on the surface of bacteria. Therefore, the unstained cells are easily noticeable against the dark/colored background.

 Advantages:

1.     Negative staining is done without heat fixation and the cells are not subjected to distortions by chemicals or heat, so their natural size and shape can be seen.

2.     Negative staining is good for bacteria that are difficult to stain, such as delicate organisms like Spirilla. Because heat fixation is not done during the staining process, slides should be handled with care because organisms are not killed.

 Procedure:

1.     Place a small drop of Nigrosin close to one end of a clean slide.

  1. Using aseptic technique, place a loopful of inoculum from the bacterial culture in the drop of nigrosin and mix.
  2. Place a slide against the drop of suspended organisms at a 45° angle and allow the drop to spread along the edge of the applied slide.
  3. Push the slide away from the drop of suspended organisms to form a thin smear. Air-dry.
    Note: Do not heat fix the slide.
  4. Examine the slides under oil immersion.

Observation: The organism is seen unstained against the black background.  The background will be dark (color of Indian ink). Negative staining is used to visualize capsules also as clear halo around the microorganism against the black background.

   

 Endospore staining (Schaeffer-Fulton method)

Vegetative cells of certain bacteria such as Bacillus spp and Clostridium spp when subjected to environmental stresses such as nutrient deprivation, they produce metabolically inactive or dormant form-endospore. Endospores are structures which are extraordinarily resistant to environmental stresses such as heat, ultraviolet radiation, gamma radiation, chemical disinfectants, and desiccation. Example of spore forming bacteria

Bacillus anthracis cause anthrax

  C. botulinum and C. tetani are the causative agents of botulism and tetanus, respectively.

  The structure of spore

 

·        The spore cell wall (or core wall) is inside the cortex and surrounds the core. The core has the normal cell structures such as ribosomes and a nucleoid, but is metabolically inactive.

·        The cortex, which may occupy as much as half the spore volume, rests beneath the spore coat. It is made of a peptidoglycan that is less cross-linked than that in vegetative cells.

·        A spore coat lies beneath the exosporium, is composed of several protein layers, and may be fairly thick. It is impermeable and responsible for the spore’s resistance to chemicals. often is surrounded by a thin, delicate covering called the exosporium.

 

·        Principle of Spore staining

·        A differential staining technique (the Schaeffer-Fulton method) is used to distinguish between the vegetative cells and the endospores

·        A primary stain (malachite green) is used to stain the endospores. Which is strong stain that can penetrate the spore coat of an endospore.

·        Endospores resist to staining, the malachite green will be forced into the endospores by heating.

·        In this technique heating acts as a mordant.

·        There is no need of using any decolorizer in this spore staining as the primary dye malachite green bind relatively weakly to the cell wall but penetrate into the spore wall.

·        If washed with water the dye come out of cell wall however not from spore wall. Water is used to decolorize the vegetative cells.

·        Malachite green dye is water-soluble and does not adhere to the cell wall vegetative cells have been disrupted by heat, because of these reasons, the malachite green rinses easily from the vegetative cells.

·         As the endospores are resistant to staining, the endospores are equally resistant to de-staining and will retain the primary dye while the vegetative cells will lose the stain.

·        The addition of a counterstain or secondary stain (safranin) is used to stain the decolorized vegetative cells.

 Procedure

1.     Fixation of bacterial cells to the surface of the microscope slide either by heating or by using methanol

2.     Application of the primary stain: Smear covered with the solution of malachite green which is strong stain that penetrate the spore coat of endospore

3.     The slide is kept on a suitable stand and heated with steam for 5 min. (Mordant

4.     The slide washed under tap water.(Decolourising agent)

5.     The slide is counter stained with safrain for about 30 sec

6.     Then the slide washed with distilled water, dried and observe under microscope.

 Observation:

 The endospores appear green in colour and vegetative cells appear in pink/red colour

 

 

  Flagella staining:  

Most motile bacteria move by use of flagella (flagellum), threadlike appendages extending from the plasma membrane and cell wall. They are about 15 or 20 μm long. Flagella are so thin they cannot be observed directly with a bright-field microscope, but must be stained with special techniques.

Bacterial species often differ distinctively in their patterns of flagella distribution.

1.     Monotrichous bacteria: (trichous means hair) have one flagella; if it is located at an end, it is said to be a polar flagellum. eg: Vibrio cholera.

2.     Lophotrichous bacteria have a cluster of flagella at one or both ends. eg: Pseudomonas. 

3.     Amphitrichous bacteria (amphi means “on both sides”) have a single flagella at each pole. eg: Spirillum

 

Flagellar Ultrastructure  

 

The bacterial flagellum is composed of three parts.

1.Filament,

2.Basal body,

3. The hook.

(1) The filament: is a hollow and cylinder constructed of a single protein called flagellin.

It is 20-nanometer-thick hollow tube. The longest portion is the filament which extends from the cell surface to the tip. The filament ends with a capping protein.

(2) Basal body is embedded in the cell and the most complex part of a flagellum.

 (3) The Hook a short, curved segment, it links the filament to its basal body and acts as a flexible coupling. The hook is made of different protein subunits.

In E. coli and most Gram-negative bacteria, the basal body has four rings. The outer L ring and P ring associate with the lipopolysaccharide and peptidoglycan layers, respectively. The inner S ring and M ring contacts the plasma membrane.  Gram positive bacteria have only two basal body rings. An inner ring connected to the plasma membrane and An outer one probably attached to the peptidoglycan

 

Bacterial Flagella: Structure, Types and Motility - Biology Ease

 

Flagella staining (Leifson’s method)

  The Leifson’s stain is made up of Tannic acid, Basic fuchsin stain and alcohol.

On staining the cell with Leifson’s stain, the tannic acid get attached to the flagella and alcohol gets evaporated

After evaporation of alcohol the thickness of flagella is increased due to deposition of tannic acid and Basic fuchsin stains the Flagella.

After this wash the slide in a gentle stream of water and treat with 1 % methylene blue for 1 minute


 Observation  Flagella appear red in colour and bacterial cell appear blue in colour.

 



Plant Viral Diseases

  Tomato Yellow Leaf Curl Virus (TYLCV) is a major problem on tomato. Once the disease has occurred, it will spread fast and drastically re...