|
African Scientists Reveal Origins
of Maize Virus
African scientists have
uncovered how one of the world's most economically devastating
crop diseases emerged, and hope to genetically engineer disease
resistant crops using the information.
Researchers compared the genetic sequence of the virulent
maize streak virus (MSV) with ten less harmful strains of
the virus from across the continent, which infect other grass
food crops such as wheat and oats.
"We found that two relatively mild grass viruses had
merged through genetic recombination," says researcher
Arvind Varsani, from the University of Cape Town (UCT), South
Africa.
This merger resulted in an ancestral MSV far more potent
than its parents, which moved into maize before spreading
rapidly across the continent.
The researchers think that this occurred about a century
ago, just when commercial agriculture was replacing subsistence
farming and maize started to overshadow indigenous crops in
Africa.
The findings, published in the September issue of the Journal
of General Virology, highlight the importance of research
into plant diseases.
"Our results mean that DNA viruses are evolving faster
than was thought. This rapid mutation increases the possibility
of new plant viruses emerging," Varsani told SciDev.Net.
"While plant diseases do not feature very highly in
the public's consciousness, their impact on food production
causes more suffering in the developing world than many high
profile human diseases," says lead researcher Darren
Martin of South Africa's Institute of Infectious Disease and
Molecular Medicine.
Studying plant diseases can provide information about pathogens
that can be used to develop resistant crops.
Each year, at least two hundred samples of infected maize
are analysed by the UCT team. An analysis of virus-infected
maize from Burkina Faso, the Central African Republic, Ivory
Coast, Namibia and Zambia will begin this month and be placed
in a database.
Dionne Shepherd of the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology
at UCT is leading efforts to genetically engineer a type of
maize resistant to the streak virus.
"We have developed maize that is resistant to the streak
virus. Now we need to prove that it will hold up under different
conditions throughout sub-Saharan Africa," Shepherd told
SciDev.Net.
Source:
SicDev Net
Date: August 25, 2008

|