Display format: with this format it is not possible to print all records. You should prefer the print format if you want to print this page.
This table contains data extracted from the ResistVir database and has been built with a specific program.
Each row corresponds with a research result described by at least one of the research groups participating in the ResistVir result. This list is sorted by country name and group name.
If you prefer to look at these data with your favorite spreadsheet tool, you can upload the corresponding csv file. Use the Unicode encoding for OpenOffice tools or cp1252 encoding for Microsoft ® Excel ©. In both files the field separator is ; and the string delimiter is ".
Austria Cyprus Czech Republic France Greece Israel Italy Spain Turkey United Kingdom
| No | Title | Group name | Country | Participants | Period | Description | Project title | Crops | Viruses | Vectors | Host plants | Resistances | Key words |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Induction of coat-protein mediated resistance to Arabis Mosaic Virus | Plant Biotechnology Unit IAM - IAM-BOKU - BOKU University | Austria | 1991 - 1992 | Biotechnological approaches to the induction of Arabis Mosaic Virus Resistance | Arabis mosaic virus | Nicotiana benthamiana | ||||||
| 2 | Transgenic approaches to Sharka resistance | Plant Biotechnology Unit IAM - IAM-BOKU - BOKU University | Austria | 1991 - 1994 | Detection du Virus de la Sharka et lutte genetique contre la maladie chez les Prunus http://www.boku.ac.at/iam/pbiotech/rp5.htm |
Plum pox virus | Prunus | ||||||
| 3 | Virus resistance breeding in grapevine | Plant Biotechnology Unit IAM - IAM-BOKU - BOKU University | Austria | 1993 - 2005 | Biotechnological methods for resistance breeding in grapevines http://www.boku.ac.at/iam/pbiotech/rp6.htm |
Grapes | Grapevine fanleaf virus Arabis mosaic virus Grapevine virus A Grapevine virus B |
Vitis | |||||
| 4 | Safety assessment of transgenic woody plants | Plant Biotechnology Unit IAM - IAM-BOKU - BOKU University | Austria | 1996 - 1999 | Risk assessment with genetically engineered woody plants expressing virus coat protein gene http://www.boku.ac.at/iam/pbiotech/rp7.htm |
Grapes | Plum pox virus Grapevine fanleaf virus Arabis mosaic virus Grapevine virus A Grapevine virus B |
Prunus Vitis |
|||||
| 5 | Risk assessment with genetically engineered woody plants expressing a virus coat protein gene and marker genes | Plant Biotechnology Unit IAM - IAM-BOKU - BOKU University | Austria | 2001 - 2005 | http://www.boku.ac.at/sicherheitsforschung/open-e.htm | Characterisation of transgenic fruit trees and analyses of direct and indirect biological interactions | Apricot | Plum pox virus | Prunus armeniaca | ||||
| 6 | Identification of tomato varieties with partial resistance to TYLCV | Plant Protection Section - ARICY | Cyprus | 1990 - 2000 | Tomato | Tomato yellow leaf curl virus | Lycopersicon esculentum | ||||||
| 7 | Resistance to CTV | Plant Protection Section - ARICY | Cyprus | 1992 to present | Identification of citrus rootstocks resistant to CTV | Citrus tristeza virus | |||||||
| 8 | Determination of sources of resistance to Plum pox virus in apricots and peaches | RICP Department of Virology - Division of Plant Medicine - RICP | Czech Republic | 1991 - 1996 | Cultivar ´Harlayne´was found immune to PPV, cvs. ´Marii de Cenad´, ´Leronda´ and ´Stark Early Orange´ resistant, and cvs. ´Harcot´, and cv. ´Sundrop´ medium resistant. No peach cultivar showed resistance to PPV. | Apricot | Plum pox virus | Prunus armeniaca | |||||
| 9 | Determination of the mode of inheritance for resistance to Plum pox virus in apricot | RICP Department of Virology - Division of Plant Medicine - RICP | Czech Republic | 1998 and after | Resistance to PPV in apricot is controlled by at least three independent nuclear complementary genes. | Apricot | Plum pox virus | Prunus armeniaca | |||||
| 10 | Determination of the degree of resistance of summer squash and Cucurbita moschata to the highly pathogenic Czech ZYMV isolate | RICP Department of Virology - Division of Plant Medicine - RICP | Czech Republic | 2001 - 2004 | The U.S. Summer squash cultivar ´Jaguar´ showed the highest degree of resistance to ZYMV. Cucurbita moschata cv. ´Menina´ was immune to ZYMV. | Squash Pumpkins |
Zucchini yellow mosaic virus | Cucurbita pepo Cucurbita moschata |
|||||
| 11 | Safety assessment of transgenic grapevines expressing viral coat protein genes | Colmar INRA Virology and vectors laboratory - UMR 1131 - INRA Colmar research center | France | Emmanuelle Vigne | 2002 - 2005 | See the paper of Fuchs et al., 2007, Safety assessment of transgenic plums and grapevines expressing viral coat protein genes: New insights into real environmental impact of perennial plants engineered for virus resistance. Journal of Plant Pathology 89 (1), 5-12 Leader: Marc Fuchs |
Transvir QLK3-CT-2002-02140 | Grapes | Grapevine fanleaf virus | Xiphinema index | Vitis vinifera | 1. transgenic resistance | |
| 12 | Molecular cloning of the pepper recessive resistance gene pvr2 for resistance to potyviruses | Functional characterization of plant-pathogen interactions - GAFL - GAP - INRA | France | Carole Caranta (Leader) Alain Palloix Christophe Robaglia |
1999 and after | A natural recessive resistance gene against potyviruses in pepper was demonstrated to correspond to the eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4E. This study corresponds to the molecular characterization of the first natural recessive resistance gene against a plant virus. | Pepper | Potato virus Y Tobacco etch virus |
Capsicum | pvr2 - pepper | 1. translation initiation factor eIF4E | ||
| 13 | The pepper pvr6 locus corresponds to a eIF(iso)4E gene | Functional characterization of plant-pathogen interactions - GAFL - GAP - INRA | France | Carole Caranta (Leader) | 2001 and after | Simultaneous mutations in translation initiation factor eIF4E and eIF(iso)4E are required to prevent Pepper veinal mottle virus infection in pepper. This study provides new data about the recruitment of specific cap-binding isoforms by potyviruses to achieve plant infection. | Pepper | Pepper veinal mottle virus | Capsicum | pvr6 - pepper | 1. translation initiation factors | ||
| 14 | Molecular mapping of factors for resistance to viruses in the solanaceae and cucurbitaceae | Functional characterization of plant-pathogen interactions - GAFL - GAP - INRA | France | Carole Caranta (Leader) Catherine Dogimont (Leader) Alain Palloix Michel Pitrat |
1990 and after | Mapping of major genes or quantitative trait loci for complete or partial resistance to economically important viruses in pepper, tomato and melon | Potyvirus Cucumber mosaic virus Melon necrotic spot virus Cucurbit aphid-borne yellows virus Alstroemeria mosaic virus |
Capsicum Lycopersicon esculentum Cucumis melo |
|||||
| 15 | Molecular cloning of the Vat gene for resistance to Aphis gossypii in melon | Functional characterization of plant-pathogen interactions - GAFL - GAP - INRA | France | Catherine Dogimont (Leader) Abdelhafid Bendahmane Michel Pitrat |
1997 and after | Aphis gossypii | Cucumis melo | Vat - muskmelon | |||||
| 16 | Metabolomic characterization of constitutive and induced resistance to Myzus persicae confered by the Rm2 gene in peach | Functional characterization of plant-pathogen interactions - GAFL - GAP - INRA | France | Jean-Luc Poëssel (Leader) Marie-Hélène Sauge Annick Moing Thierry Pascal Claire Dufour Catherine Deborde Marie-Noelle Corre |
2006 and before | Peach | Myzus persicae | Prunus persica | Rm2 - peach | ||||
| 17 | Characterization of phagorepellent and toxic effects on Myzus persicae of isolated secondary metabolites identified in resistant peach genotypes | Functional characterization of plant-pathogen interactions - GAFL - GAP - INRA | France | Jean-Luc Poëssel (Leader) Marie-Hélène Sauge (Leader) Yves Rahbé Catherine Deborde Marie-Noelle Corre |
2006 and before | Peach | Myzus persicae | Prunus persica | Rm2 - peach | ||||
| 18 | Identification and mutation analysis of PVY virulence determinant towards the pvr2 and pot-1 resistance alleles in pepper and tomato. | Plant Pathology Unit - SPE - INRA | France | Benoît Moury (Leader) Mireille Jacquemond (Leader) Valérie Ayme Caroline Morel Alain Palloix I. Elisabeth Johansen |
1999 and after | The PVY viral genome-linked (VPg) protein was shown to be the virulence factor corresponding to the pvr2 resistance alleles in pepper and the pot-1 resistance gene in Lycopersicon hirsutum, which encode eukaryotic translation initiation factors eIF4E. | Pepper Tomato |
Potato virus Y Tobacco etch virus |
Capsicum annuum Lycopersicon hirsutum |
pvr2 - pepper pot-1 - tomato |
|||
| 19 | Analysis of the selective pressure exerted on plant virus genomes identifies major epidemiological constraints. | Plant Pathology Unit - SPE - INRA | France | Benoît Moury (Leader) | 2000 and after | The identification of amino acids in plant virus genomes which undergo positive selection allows to understand the role of epidemiological constraints exerted on virus populations (virulence selection, selection for transmission efficiency by vectors, internal vs. external constraints). | Pepper Potato Sugar beet |
Potato virus Y Potato virus A Cucumber mosaic virus Beet necrotic yellow vein virus |
Capsicum Solanum tuberosum Beta vulgaris |
pvr2 - pepper | |||
| 20 | Identification of the protein encoded by the mo1 gene which confers resistance to LMV in lettuce | Plant/Virus Interactions - UMR GDPP - Research Centre INRA Bordeaux-Aquitaine - INRA | France | Olivier Le Gall (Leader) Sylvie German-Retana |
2000 - 2003 | Lettuce | Lettuce mosaic virus | Lactuca sativa | mo1 - lettuce | ||||
| 21 | The restriction of the long distance movement of LMV and PPV are controlled by the RTM genes in Arabidopsis thaliana | Plant/Virus Interactions - UMR GDPP - Research Centre INRA Bordeaux-Aquitaine - INRA | France | Frédéric Revers (Leader) Véronique Decroocq |
2003 - 2005 | Lettuce mosaic virus Plum pox virus |
Arabidopsis thaliana | RTM - Arabidopsis thaliana | |||||
| 22 | The translation initiation factor eIF4G and its isoformes are used by potyviruses to achieve their viral cycle and are potentially new target to developp resistance | Plant/Virus Interactions - UMR GDPP - Research Centre INRA Bordeaux-Aquitaine - INRA | France | Sylvie German-Retana (Leader) | 2003 - 2006 | Lettuce mosaic virus Plum pox virus Turnip mosaic virus |
Arabidopsis thaliana | ||||||
| 23 | Analogues of virus resistance genes map to QTLs for resistance to sharka disease in Prunus | Plant/Virus Interactions - UMR GDPP - Research Centre INRA Bordeaux-Aquitaine - INRA | France | Véronique Decroocq (Leader) Valérie Schurdi-Levraud |
2000 - 2004 | Apricot Peaches and nectarines Plums and sloes |
Plum pox virus | Prunus | |||||
| 24 | Development of a method (NEWeB) for studying interactions of host or viral proteins with virus particles. | PPIP Plant Pathology Laboratory - PPIP - NAGREF | Greece | Ioannis N. Manoussopoulos (Leader) M. Tsagris (Leader) E. Maiss (Leader) |
1995 - 1997 | Determination of the PPV virus particle-HC interaction. | Plum pox virus | Nicotiana benthamiana Nicotiana clevelandii |
|||||
| 25 | Investigation on the distribution of Lettuce big vein virus and Mirafiori lettuce virus in lettuce crops in Greece | PPIP Plant Pathology Laboratory - PPIP - NAGREF | Greece | Ioannis N. Manoussopoulos (Leader) P. Roggero (Leader) |
2001 - 2003 | Detection of LBVV and MiLV under natural conditions and assesment on the effect on lettuce quality | Lettuce | Mirafiori lettuce virus Lettuce big-vein associated virus |
Lactuca sativa | ||||
| 26 | Transgenic cucumber plants resistant to several viruses | ARO Department of Plant Pathology - Institute of Plant Protection - ARO | Israel | Amit Gal-On (Leader) Aaron Zelcer Yeheskal Antignus Victor Gaba Dalia Wolf Diana Liebman |
2000 - 2006 | We generated in homozygote commercial cucumber resistant to several important viruses: resistance was verified by various inoculation methods in the greenhouse | Cucumber | Zucchini yellow mosaic virus Cucumber fruit mottle mosaic virus Cucumber vein yellowing virus Cucurbit yellow stunting disorder virus |
Cucumis sativus | 1. transgenic resistance | |||
| 27 | Expression of protein and peptides via attenuated virus vector | ARO Department of Plant Pathology - Institute of Plant Protection - ARO | Israel | Amit Gal-On (Leader) | 1998 - 2006 | We expressed many genes via ZYMV vector: some genes benefitial to agriculture were field tested, and some highly valued proteins were partially purified from the plant. We also succeeded to use this vector for epitope presentation to raise specific antibodies in chicks. We are now studying the use of this vector for gene silencing. | Musk melon Squash |
Zucchini yellow mosaic virus | Cucumis melo Citrullus lanatus |
1. ZYMV-AG | |||
| 28 | Potyvirus resistance | ARO Department of Plant Pathology - Institute of Plant Protection - ARO | Israel | Victor Gaba (Leader) Amit Gal-On Arieh Rosner |
2003 - 2006 | We have produced a transgenic tobacco line with a 600bp inverted repeat from the PVY replicase gene that is very resistant to the homologous virus, and sequence-related virus cultures. The resistance is strong against less related PVY strains, but breaks eventually. | Tobacco | Potato virus Y | Nicotiana tabacum | ||||
| 29 | Helper component HC-Pro as a key potyvirus symptom expression determinant | ARO Department of Plant Pathology - Institute of Plant Protection - ARO | Israel | Amit Gal-On (Leader) | 2003 - 2006 | Potyvirus Zucchini yellow mosaic virus Potato virus Y Turnip mosaic virus Papaya ringspot virus |
Cucurbitaceae Nicotiana benthamiana Arabidopsis thaliana |
||||||
| 30 | Production of transgenic plants resistant to Plum pox virus by RNAi technology | C.R.A.-Plant Pathology Research Institute - CRA | Italy | Vincenza Ilardi (Leader) Elisa Di Nicola-Negri Angela Brunetti |
2001 - 2004 | Production of transgenic plants resistant to PPV | Plum pox virus | Nicotiana benthamiana | 1. RNA silencing 2. 5' end 3. P1 4. HC-Pro 5. P3 |
||||
| 31 | Production of transgenic tomato plants resistant to Cucumber mosaic virus by coat protein strategy | C.R.A.-Plant Pathology Research Institute - CRA | Italy | Marina Barba (Leader) Vincenza Ilardi Laura Tomassoli Wojciech Kaniewski |
1992 - 1997 | Tomato | Cucumber mosaic virus | Lycopersicon esculentum | 1. coat protein 2. transgenic 3. CMV 4. Resistance |
||||
| 32 | Use of wild accessions and near isogenic lines of Lycopersicon hirsutum for the identification of host factors involved in the susceptibility to Cucumber mosaic virus and its satellite RNA. | Department of Plant Protection and Applied Microbiology - UNIBA | Italy | 2002 and after | Several accessions of wild and cultivated species of the genus Lycopersicon, including L. esculentum (tomato), L. hirsutum, L. chilense, L. pimpinellifolium, L. pennellii and L. peruvianum, were tested for their susceptibility to combinations of Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) with variants of satellite RNA (satRNA) co-inducing diverse disease phenotypes in tomato. The following CMV preparations have been used for the characterisation of Lycopersicon spp./CMV/satRNA interactions: a) CMV-Fny (no satRNA); b) CMV-FB (Fny + a Benign satRNA variant, symptomless on tomato); c) CMV-FS (Fny + a tomato Stunting-inducing satRNA variant); d) CMV-FN (Fny + a tomato Necrosis-inducing satRNA). CMV-Fny induced on all hosts the typical leaf malformation (shoestring, reduced leaflet blade), and no resistance was observed on any of the tested genotypes. CMV-FB induced on all hosts a phenotype characterised by latent infection accompanied by the down-regulation of viral RNA replication, referred to as LIDR (Latent Infection, Down-Regulation). Interestingly, LIDR was observed also on some wild Lycopersicon accessions inoculated with CMV-FS and CMV-FN that are aggressive on tomato. In particular, accessions of L. chilense showed LIDR with both the aggressive CMV/satRNA combinations tested, whereas accessions of L. hirsutum and L. pennellii showed LIDR upon inoculation with CMV-FS, but susceptibility to systemic necrosis induced by CMV-FN. A screening of 99 near isogenic lines, containing single introgressions from L. hirsutum accession LA1777 in the L. esculentum cv. E6206 genetic background (Monforte and Tanksley, Genome/Génome 43: 803, 2000), was undertaken to map host factors determining differential susceptibility to CMV/satRNA in Lycopersicon spp. Observing a temporary resistance to CMV-FS on one of these lines, a possible host factor interfering with stunting, but not with systemic necrosis, was mapped genetically to L. hirsutum chromosome 6. Other loci were identified, correlating with changes in symptoms expression rather than with absence of symptoms. From these preliminary studies the following conclusions are drawn: a) CMV/satRNAs diverse symptoms (leaf malformation, stunting, necrosis) on host Lycopersicon spp. are due to alterations of apparently individual and uncoupled pathways; b) L. chilense can be a source of gene(s) responsible for protection from CMV/satRNA-induced lethal necrosis; c) the LIDR phenotype appears to be regulated by a multigenic character not directly transferable to cultivated tomato genotypes. | Molecular and genetic bases involved in the susceptibility of Lycopersicon spp. to cucumber mosaic virus and its satellite RNA | Tomato | Cucumber mosaic virus | Lycopersicon esculentum | ||||
| 33 | Characterization Of Synergy Between Cucumber Mosaic Virus And Potato Virus Y In Tomato. | Department of Plant Protection and Applied Microbiology - UNIBA | Italy | 2002 and after | We investigated on some biological and molecular characteristics of the synergistic effects shown by Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) and Potato virus Y (PVY) on tomato. Plants inoculated with CMV-Fny exhibited the typical leaf reduction symptoms. We generated two pseudorecombinant strains with different pathogenetic properties inoculating CMV-Fny RNA1 and RNA3 in addition to, respectively, CMV-LS RNA2 (CMV-FLF) and the CMV-Fny RNA2 mutant 209m3D2b (CMV-D2b). CMV-FLF, like the RNA2 donor strain CMV-LS, induced very mild symptoms on tomato, whereas CMV-D2b, a modified CMV-Fny that cannot translate the 2b protein, did not infect tomato systemically. Tomato plants infected with PVY-SON41 showed symptomless infection. CMV-D2b spread systemically when inoculated on PVY-infected tomato plants, revealing that the loss of movement functions of the 2b protein mutant was complemented by PVY analogue functions, as shown also by electron microscopy and immunogold labeling. With the exception of PVY + CMV-D2b, which induced a mild phenotype, symptoms resulted exacerbated in mixed infections, confirming a role for the 2b protein as an enhancer of symptom severity. Symptom severity in mixed infections correlated with increased viral spread and RNA accumulation levels more evident at 60 days post-infection, both in the case of CMV and PVY, although especially the latter virus showed heterogeneity in the distribution throughout the plant and sample-to-sample variation. Small interfering RNA (siRNA) accumulation, the typical hallmark of RNA silencing in virus-infected plants, varied in different PVY/CMV combinations showing positive correlation with the corresponding viral RNA levels, and suggested no role of CMV and PVY RNA silencing suppressors, 2b and HC-Pro proteins respectively, in preventing RNA silencing directed against both viruses in natural infections. | CMV- and PVY-mediated RNA silencing in mixed infections in tomato | Tomato | Cucumber mosaic virus Potato virus Y |
Lycopersicon esculentum | ||||
| 34 | Transgenic lines expressing mutant versions of the Rep protein of TYLCSV resistant to virus infection | Institute of Plant Virology - CNR | Italy | Emanuela Noris (Leader) | 2000 - 2006 | Transgenic and natural resistance to virus and phytoplasma diseases of crops | Tomato | Tomato yellow leaf curl virus | Lycopersicon esculentum Nicotiana benthamiana |
1. TYLCSV | |||
| 35 | Characterization of the resistance mediated by the Cucumis melo nsv gene. | Plant Pathology Group - Stress Biology and Plant Pathology Department - CEBAS - CSIC | Spain | Miguel A. Aranda (Leader) Verónica Truniger Cristina Nieto |
2000 and after | Musk melon | Melon necrotic spot virus | Cucumis melo | |||||
| 36 | Detection of Turkish Beet Necrotic Yellow Vein Benyvirus (BNYVV) Isolates by RT-PCR (Plant Pathologyin press) Occurence of RNA 5 in Turkish BNYVV Isolates. (Phytoparasitica, in press) |
Department of Plant Protection AU - AUZF - AU | Turkey | Filiz ERTUNÇ (Leader) Digdem ILHAN |
1999 - 2003 | Şeker Pancarı Nekrotik Sarı Damar Virusunun Genomik Konformasyonunun RT-PCR Yöntemi ile Belirlenmesi. | Sugar beet | Beet necrotic yellow vein virus | Polymyxa betae | Beta vulgaris | |||
| 37 | The occurence and molecular characterization of PNRSV isolates in Turkey. | Department of Plant Protection AU - AUZF - AU | Turkey | Cigdem ULUBAS | 2002 - 2004 | Vişne ve Kirazda Enfeksiyon Yapan Virüslerin RT-PCR Yöntemi ile Saptanması ve Karakterizasyonu. | Molecular Characterization and detection of sour and sweet cherry viruses by RT-PCR Method. | Cherry (all varieties) | Prunus necrotic ringspot virus | Prunus | |||
| 38 | Identification of markers tightly linked to sbm recessive genes for resistance to Pea seed borne mosaic virus | John Innes Centre - BBSRC | United Kingdom | Andy Maule (Leader) | 2001 - 2004 | mapping of linked markers to sbm-1/sbm-4 | eIF4E-based recessive resistance against pea seed borne mosaic potyvirus in pea | Peas | Pea seed-borne mosaic virus | Pisum sativum | sbm-1 - Pisum sativum | ||
| 39 | The potyvirus recessive resistance gene, sbm1, identifies a novel role for translation initiation factor eIF4e in cell-to-cell trafficking. Sbm-1 and Sbm-4 shown to be distinct allelic variants of eIF4E. | John Innes Centre - BBSRC | United Kingdom | Andy Maule (Leader) | 2001 - 2004 | Functional study of the role of eIF4E | eIF4E-based recessive resistance against pea seed borne mosaic potyvirus in pea | Peas | Pea seed-borne mosaic virus | Pisum sativum | sbm-1 - Pisum sativum | 1. potyvirus 2. recessive resistance 3. eIF4E 4. cell-to-cell movement |
|
| 40 | Resistance to Maize streak virus localises to the distal region of chromosome 6 in barley | John Innes Centre - BBSRC | United Kingdom | Margaret Irene Boulton (Leader) David Laurie |
2002 - 2006 | mapping of HvMsv-1 | Biological and genetic characterisation of novel resistance to Maize streak virus in barley | Barley | Maize streak virus | Hordeum vulgare | HvMsv-1 - barley | 1. Maize streak virus 2. resistance barley 3. mapping |
|
| 41 | Resistance to Maize streak virus, conferred by HvMsv-1 is developmentally-regulated | John Innes Centre - BBSRC | United Kingdom | Margaret Irene Boulton (Leader) David Laurie |
2001 - 2006 | Biological characterisation of HvMsv-1-mediated resistance | Biological and genetic characterisation of novel resistance to Maize streak virus in barley | Barley Maize Wheat Rice |
Maize streak virus | Hordeum vulgare Zea mays Triticum aestivum Oryza sativa |
HvMsv-1 - barley | 1. Maize streak virus 2. barley 3. developmental resistance 4. host range |