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Dive into the research topics where Dallas L. Seifers is active.

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Featured researches published by Dallas L. Seifers.


Plant Disease | 1997

Identification of the Wheat Curl Mite as the Vector of the High Plains Virus of Corn and Wheat

Dallas L. Seifers; T. L. Harvey; T. J. Martin; Stanley G. Jensen

ABSTRACT Wheat with virus-like symptoms (extracts containing a 33-kDa protein in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, negative in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to wheat streak mosaic virus, and not infectious in a backassay to other wheat) reacted positively to antiserum made against a protein purified from symptomatic corn infected with the High Plains virus (HPV), indicating a serological relationship between the corn and wheat pathogens. The wheat curl mite (WCM, Aceria tosichella Keifer) was identified as the vector of the virus and caused persistent infection of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in greenhouse experiments. The HPV was recovered in the field from naturally infected wheat where the number of HPV-infected plants decreased with increasing distance from the WCM source in volunteer wheat.


Plant Disease | 2009

Identification of the wheat curl mite as the vector of Triticum mosaic virus.

Dallas L. Seifers; T. J. Martin; T. L. Harvey; John P. Fellers; J. P. Michaud

Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) is a newly discovered virus found infecting wheat (Triticum aestivum) in Kansas. This study was conducted to determine if the wheat curl mite (WCM, Aceria tosichella) and the bird cherry oat aphid (Rhopalosiphum padi) could transmit TriMV. Using different sources of WCM and two different isolates of TriMV, we were able to show the WCM is the vector of TriMV. Field analysis by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) demonstrated natural infection patterns of wheat infected with TriMV, Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV), or both TriMV and WSMV, putatively infected by viruliferous WCM from a volunteer source growing adjacent to the wheat. Moreover, by single WCM transfers using WCM obtained from different wheat plants naturally infected with TriMV and WSMV and naturally infested with WCM, we showed that these WCM also transmitted TriMV only to wheat or transmitted both TriMV and WSMV to wheat. The infection rates of wheat with TriMV only using WCM transmission was low in both laboratory and field analyses. However, field analyses by ELISA showed that levels of infection of wheat by both TriMV and WSMV were high. No transmission of TriMV to wheat by R. padi occurred in our studies.


Plant Disease | 2008

Triticum mosaic virus: A New Virus Isolated from Wheat in Kansas

Dallas L. Seifers; T. J. Martin; T. L. Harvey; John P. Fellers; James P. Stack; Marietta Ryba-White; Steve Haber; Oleg V. Krokhin; Victor Spicer; Nicole Lovat; Andrej Yamchuk; Kenneth G. Standing

In 2006, a mechanically-transmissible and previously uncharacterized virus was isolated in Kansas from wheat plants with mosaic symptoms. The physiochemical properties of the virus were examined by purification on cesium chloride density gradients, electron microscopy, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), sequencing of the nucleotides and amino acids of the coat protein, and immunological reactivity. Purified preparations contained flexuous, rod-shaped particles that resembled potyviruses. The coat protein was estimated from SDS-PAGE to have a mass of approximately 35 kDa. Its amino acid sequence, as deduced from DNA sequencing of cloned, reverse-transcribed viral RNA and separately determined by time-of-flight mass spectrometry, was most closely related (49% similarity) to Sugarcane streak mosaic virus, a member of the Tritimovirus genus of the family Potyviridae. The virus gave strong positive reactions during enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays using polyclonal antibodies raised against purified preparations of the cognate virus but gave consistent negative reactions against antibodies to Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV), other wheat potyviruses, and the High Plains virus. When the virus was inoculated on the WSMV-resistant wheat cv. RonL, systemic symptoms appeared and plant growth was diminished significantly in contrast with WSMV-inoculated RonL. Taken together, the data support consideration of this virus as a new potyvirus, and the name Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) is proposed.


Plant Disease | 2001

Success stories: breeding for wheat disease resistance in Kansas.

William W. Bockus; Jon A. Appel; Robert L. Bowden; Allan K. Fritz; Bikram S. Gill; T. Joe Martin; R. G. Sears; Dallas L. Seifers; Gina Brown-Guedira; Merle G. Eversmeyer

the development, release, and adoption of wheat cultivars with resistance to important wheat diseases. As a result of the annual disease survey and estimation of losses, the impact that resistant cultivars had on disease losses could be quantified. This paper describes the use of genetic resistance in wheat for control of diseases and related yield effects in Kansas during the past 25 to 30


Plant Disease | 2002

Differential transmission of isolates of the High Plains virus by different sources of wheat curl mites.

Dallas L. Seifers; T. L. Harvey; Raymond Louie; D. T. Gordon; T. J. Martin

High Plains virus (HPV) isolates from Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Texas, and Utah were serologically related, had similar relative molecular masses (sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) for the 32-kDa diagnostic HPV protein, and were transmissible and maintained free of Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) by vascular puncture inoculation. Collections of wheat curl mites (Aceria tosichella Keifer; WCM) from Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Texas differentially transmitted these isolates. For collections from South Dakota and Texas, little or no HPV transmission occurred, whereas WCM from Nebraska and Montana transmitted all five isolates. The collection from Kansas mostly transmitted only one HPV isolate. Aviruliferous or viruliferous WSMV Nebraska WCM transmitted HPV at similar rates and aviruliferous Montana WCM transmitted HPV at lower levels than viruliferous Montana WCM.


Plant Disease | 1996

Natural infection of pearl millet and sorghum by wheat streak mosaic virus in Kansas

Dallas L. Seifers; T. L. Harvey; K. D. Kofoid; W. D. Stegmeier

Pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) and sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) plants at Hays, Kansas, were observed to have viruslike symptoms. Symptomatic plants were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) against wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV), maize dwarf mosaic, sugarcane mosaic virus strain MDMV-B, and johnsongrass mosaic virus. Positive reactions were obtained only with WSMV antisera. Pearl millet and sorghum plants (of genotypes naturally infected in the field) mechanically inoculated in the greenhouse developed symptoms and were positive in ELISA for WSMV. The virus was vectored by wheat curl mites (Aceria tosichella) from pearl millet and sorghum to the host from which it was obtained and to wheat. Mechanical inoculation of several sorghum lines showed that the WSMV isolates differed in ability to infect sorghum, and the type specimen could not infect any of the sorghum lines. These results indicated that WSMV occurring at Hays can infect sorghum and pearl millet, crop plants not reported previously as susceptible to WSMV.


Plant Disease | 1992

Partial characterization of a Colorado isolate of Agropyron mosaic virus

Dallas L. Seifers

Wheat collected in Colorado was found to be infected with both wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) and Agropyron mosaic virus (AMV). The viruses were identified by means of host range tests, serology, and electrophoretic comparisons of coat proteins. The AMV isolates (the Colorado isolate and PV 75) were further characterized by partial chemical proteolysis of capsid proteins and electrophoretic analysis of cleavage products and by comparison of single-stranded and double-stranded RNAs. This is the first report of AMV in Colorado (.)


Plant Disease | 2001

Seed Transmission of the High Plains virus in Sweet Corn

R. L. Forster; Dallas L. Seifers; Carl A. Strausbaugh; S. G. Jensen; E. M. Ball; T. L. Harvey

The High Plains virus (HPV), which infects corn and other cereals, was first found in 1993 in the United States. Research was initiated in 1995 to investigate the potential for seed transmission of HPV. Sweet corn seeds of various cultivars harvested in 1994 to 1996 from 13 fields and research plots in southwestern Idaho, Colorado, and Nebraska were seeded in potting mix in the greenhouse. Leaf samples collected at the three- to six-leaf stage from both symptomatic and asymptomatic plants were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Of the 46,600 seeds planted, 38,473 seedlings emerged, and three tested positive by ELISA, exhibited mosaic symptoms, and had the presence of HPV confirmed by an additional test. One of the positive plants was used for successful acquisition and transmission of HPV by the wheat curl mite to Westford barley. The other two plants were used to successfully transfer HPV to other corn plants by vascular puncture inoculation of seed. These results indicate that HPV can be seed transmitted at a very low frequency in sweet corn.


Plant Disease | 1998

A Partial Host Range of the High Plains Virus of Corn and Wheat

Dallas L. Seifers; T. L. Harvey; T. J. Martin; Stanley G. Jensen

Barley (Hordeum vulgare), cheat (Bromus secalinus), corn (Zea mays), oat (Avena sativa), rye (Secale cereale), and wheat (Triticum aestivum) were infected by a Kansas isolate of the High Plains virus (HPV) in greenhouse experiments, but several other grass species were not. Infection of a host was dependent upon wheat curl mite numbers. Although both green foxtail (Setaria viridis) and yellow foxtail (S. glauca) are found naturally infected by HPV, only yellow foxtail could be infected in greenhouse experiments. Field sampling (1994 to 1996) of symptomatic yellow foxtail showed that it is a good indicator of the presence of HPV, with 252 of 278 symptomatic plants testing positive in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for HPV, 2 of 278 for American wheat striate mosaic virus, and 1 of 278 for johnson grass mosaic virus, whereas 23 of 278 symptomatic plants were negative for all viruses tested by ELISA and were not infectious in back-assays.


Plant Disease | 2011

Occurrence and Yield Effects of Wheat Infected with Triticum mosaic virus in Kansas

Dallas L. Seifers; T. J. Martin; John P. Fellers

Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) infects wheat (Triticum aestivum) in the Great Plains region of the United States. This study determined the occurrence of TriMV at three locations over 3 years and yield effects of wheat mechanically infected with TriMV. Wheat infection with TriMV, Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV), and the High Plains virus (HPV) was verified using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Both wheat singly infected with TriMV and doubly infected with TriMV and WSMV occurred at three, two, and one locations in 2007, 2008, and 2009, respectively. Wheat singly infected with HPV occurred at one and two locations in 2008 and 2009, respectively. Wheat doubly infected with WSMV and HPV occurred at one location in 2008 and 2009. Infection with TriMV declined at two locations each year and, at the third location, it increased the second year and was not detected the third year. WSMV infection increased, except for a decline the third year at one location. In contrast to 3.0% infection of wheat with TriMV and WSMV at one location, 85% of the wheat 1.6 km from that site was infected with TriMV and WSMV in 2009. Infection of wheat with TriMV caused significant yield and volume weight reductions in Danby, RonL, and Jagalene but not KS96HW10-3 wheat.

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T. L. Harvey

Kansas State University

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T. J. Martin

Kansas State University

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Steve Haber

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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John P. Fellers

Agricultural Research Service

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Werner Ens

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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K. G. Standing

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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