PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Combating cucurbit yellow stunting disorder virus

2011-03-10
(Press-News.org) This release is available in Spanish. U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists are working to give melon growers some relief from cucurbit yellow stunting disorder virus, or CYSDV.

In 2006, Agricultural Research Service (ARS) plant pathologist Bill Wintermantel with the U.S. Agricultural Research Station in Salinas, Calif., and university colleagues identified the plant disease that growers in California's Imperial Valley and nearby Yuma, Ariz., noticed was spreading through their cucurbit fields. Cucurbit crops affected included cantaloupe and honeydew melons.

ARS is USDA's principal intramural scientific research agency, and this research supports the USDA priority of promoting international food security.

CYSDV, a whitefly-transmitted virus originally from the Middle East, was identified by Wintermantel and colleagues in the melon-production region of California, Arizona, and Sonora, Mexico, in the fall of 2006. They also identified CYSDV a year later in Florida. Though it remains unclear how the virus spread to California and Florida, virus samples taken from both regions indicate they are essentially genetically identical to one another, according to Wintermantel.

In an effort to assist growers, ARS horticulturist and research leader Jim McCreight at Salinas is working to develop CYSDV-resistant melons. McCreight describes as serendipitous his discovery in 2006 of resistance to CYSDV in an exotic, salad-type melon from India that was being tested for resistance to another disease.

After screening more than 400 melon accessions from India in the field, McCreight found a few plants in several other vegetable-type melons from India that show promise for resistance to the virus. Work continues on developing a resistant melon that growers in the southwestern United States could plant.

McCreight's field tests showed that disease resistance can only be effective in the desert southwest when whitefly populations are controlled. According to McCreight, hundreds of whiteflies constantly feeding on the plants assure high frequency of infection by the virus. Continued feeding by the whiteflies, particularly in summer-planted melons grown in high temperatures (more than 100 degrees Fahrenheit in the daytime), further weakens the plants. The result is often complete loss of fruit yield and quality or plant death.

Melons from plants infected with CYSDV may appear normal, but often have reduced sugar levels, resulting in poor marketability. The virus is spread by the whitefly, Bemisia tabaci, a small, sap-sucking insect that carries the virus from plant-to-plant as it feeds.

Several local weeds and important alternate crops such as alfalfa and lettuce were identified as hosts of CYSDV. However, unlike cucurbits, these newly identified crop hosts were symptomless carriers of the virus and their yield was unaffected. Wintermantel and his colleagues found the virus is capable of infecting plants in seven plant families in addition to the Cucurbitaceae family.

### Read more about this research in the March 2011 issue of Agricultural Research magazine. http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/mar11/melons0311.htm

USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer and lender. To file a complaint of discrimination, write: USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Ave., S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (800) 795-3272 (voice), or (202) 720-6382 (TDD).


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Synthetic biology: TUM researchers develop novel kind of fluorescent protein

2011-03-10
This release is available in German. Proteins are the most important functional biomolecules in nature with numerous applications in life science research, biotechnology and medicine. So how can they be modified in the most effective way to attain certain desired properties? In the past, the modifications were usually carried out either chemically or via genetic engineering. The team of Professor Arne Skerra from the TUM Chair of Biological Chemistry has now developed a more elegant combined solution: By extending the otherwise universal genetic code, the scientists are ...

Banana peels get a second life as water purifier

2011-03-10
To the surprisingly inventive uses for banana peels — which include polishing silverware, leather shoes, and the leaves of house plants — scientists have added purification of drinking water contaminated with potentially toxic metals. Their report, which concludes that minced banana peel performs better than an array of other purification materials, appears in ACS's journal Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research. Gustavo Castro and colleagues note that mining processes, runoff from farms, and industrial wastes can all put heavy metals, such as lead and copper, into ...

An advance toward blood transfusions that require no typing

2011-03-10
Scientists are reporting an "important step" toward development of a universal blood product that would eliminate the need to "type" blood to match donor and recipient before transfusions. A report on the "immunocamouflage" technique, which hides blood cells from antibodies that could trigger a potentially fatal immune reaction that occurs when blood types do not match, appears in the ACS journal, Biomacromolecules. Maryam Tabrizian and colleagues note that blood transfusions require a correct match between a donor and the recipient's blood. This can be a tricky proposition ...

New study shows government spending preferences of Americans

2011-03-10
In its 27th survey of American spending priorities since 1973 conducted as part of its General Social Survey (GSS), NORC at the University of Chicago Wednesday released a report on its most recent findings. By a notable margin, education and health care were the top two spending priorities of Americans. And Americans are consistent in that: those two categories have finished in the top two in each of the ten surveys since 1990. The spending priorities report is derived from recently released data of the 2010 General Social Survey which NORC has conducted for forty years. ...

New molecular robot can be programmed to follow instructions

2011-03-10
Scientists have developed a programmable "molecular robot" — a sub-microscopic molecular machine made of synthetic DNA that moves between track locations separated by 6nm. The robot, a short strand of DNA, follows instructions programmed into a set of fuel molecules determining its destination, for example, to turn left or right at a junction in the track. The report, which represents a step toward futuristic nanomachines and nanofactories, appears in ACS's Nano Letters. Andrew Turberfield and colleagues point out that other scientists have developed similar DNA-based ...

Battling the bedbug epidemic

2011-03-10
Mom's comforting tuck-them-in-words — "Sleep tight, don't let the bedbugs bite"— is becoming an impossible dream for millions of people as the world experiences a resurgence of an ancient scourge that is fostering human misery, financial burdens and the risk of exposure to potentially toxic materials. That's the message from the cover story of the current edition of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), ACS' weekly newsmagazine. In the article, C&EN News Editor William G. Schulz points out that bedbugs represent a growing epidemic that is difficult to control. The bugs ...

Pinpointing air pollution's effects on the heart

2011-03-10
Scientists are untangling how the tiniest pollution particles – which we take in with every breath we breathe – affect our health, making people more vulnerable to cardiovascular and respiratory problems. While scientists know that air pollution can aggravate heart problems, showing exactly how it does so has been challenging. In a study published recently in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, scientists showed that in people with diabetes, breathing ultrafine particles can activate platelets, cells in the blood that normally reduce bleeding from a wound, ...

Study shows how plants sort and eliminate genes over millennia

2011-03-10
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Hybrid plants with multiple genome copies show evidence of preferential treatment of the genes from one ancient parent over the genes of the other parent, even to the point where some of the unfavored genes eventually are deleted. Brian Dilkes, an assistant professor of genetics at Purdue University, worked with a team of scientists at the University of California Davis and University of Southern California to study the genome of Arabidopsis suecica, a hybrid species with four chromosome sets formed tens of thousands of years ago from a cross between ...

What's in a name? Broadening the biological lexicon to bolster translational research

2011-03-10
So-called model organisms have long been at the core of biomedical research, allowing scientists to study the ins and outs of human disorders in non-human subjects. In the ideal, such models accurately recapitulate a human disorder so that, for example, the Parkinson's disease observed in a rat model would be virtually indistinguishable from that in a human patient. The reality, of course, is that rats aren't human, and few models actually faithfully reflect the phenotype of the disease in question. Thus, in the strictest sense of the word, many "models" aren't truly ...

Novel method could improve the performance of proteins used therapeutically

2011-03-10
FINDINGS: Whitehead Institute scientists have created a method that uses the enzyme sortase A to site-specifically modify proteins. Using this technique, researchers were able to increase potency, slow the metabolism, and improve thermal stability of several proteins, including interferon alpha 2 (IFN-alpha 2) and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor 3 (GCSF-3). IFN-alpha 2 is used to treat a variety of diseases, including leukemia, melanoma, and chronic hepatitis C, while GCSF-3 (known as filgrastim and marketed as Neupogen®) is administered to patients with neutropenia. RELEVANCE: ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Statins may reduce risk of death by 39% for patients with life-threatening sepsis

Paradigm shift: Chinese scientists transform "dispensable" spleen into universal regenerative hub

Medieval murder: Records suggest vengeful noblewoman had priest assassinated in 688-year-old cold case

Desert dust forming air pollution, new study reveals

A turning point in the Bronze Age: the diet was changed and the society was transformed

Drought-resilient plant holds promise for future food production, study finds

To spot toxic speech online, try AI

UN-backed research team shows benefits of tracking ocean giants for marine conservation

Sharp-tailed grouse in south-central Wyoming potentially a distinct subspecies

Abdul Khan, MD, appointed chief executive officer of Ochsner River Region

A forward-looking approach to climate disaster preparation

UN-backed global research shows benefits of tracking ocean giants for marine conservation

Zebrafish model for an ultra-rare genetic disease identifies potential treatments

Masking, distancing and quarantines keep chimps safe from human disease, study shows

Dr. Warren Johnson honored with Weill Award

Adopting a healthy diet may have cardiometabolic benefits regardless of weight loss

New study reveals global warming accelerates antibiotic resistance in soils

Scientists argue for more FDA oversight of healthcare AI tools

Study finds dehorning of rhinos drastically reduces poaching

NIH researchers conclude that taurine is unlikely to be a good aging biomarker

Caterpillar factories produce fluorescent nanocarbons

Taurine is not a reliable biomarker for aging, longitudinal study shows

Lidar survey reveals expansive precolonial maize farming in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula

Dehorning of rhinos reduced poaching by 78% in Greater Kruger African reserves from 2017 to 2023

Retinal prosthesis bestows artificial vision in blind mice and detects near-infrared in large animals

Archaeologists uncover massive 1000-year-old Native American fields in Northern Michigan that defy limits of farming

Advance in creating organoids could aid research, lead to treatment

Groundbreaking study maps the movements of marine megafauna

UN scientists propose a ‘global trust’ to safeguard critical minerals as trade tensions mount

Fish ‘beauty salons’ offer insight into how microbes move within reefs

[Press-News.org] Combating cucurbit yellow stunting disorder virus