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KMID : 1041219740160010085
Journal of Sericultural and Entomological Science
1974 Volume.16 No. 1 p.85 ~ p.92
Studies on the Generation-to-Generation Transmission of Cytoplasmic Polyhedrosis Virus and the Effect of Their Activation on the Induction in the Next Generation in the Silkworm, Bombyx mori L
Lim Jong-Sung

Kim Keun-Young
Abstract
Many of studies on the transovarial transmission of occult virus and their activation due to various stresses such as cold or heat treatment, chemical feeding, and nutritional deficiency, etc., in the silkworm, Bombyx mori L. have been made, but any attempts have been not made to control virus diseases by detection of the occult virus-carried moths in the production of silkworm egg of hybrids, because of difficulty to detect occult virus in any stage. Therefore, it may be worth while to disclose whether a sublethal infection of the moths from which active virus are detectable, has the same level of induction rate as that of occult virus activation, thus to apply its results for the reduction of the occurence of virus diseases in silkworm rearing. For these purposes, the following experiment was conducted as one of preliminary steps. In this study, investigations on the generation-to-generation transmission of occult virus and a sublethal infection, and the role of chromosomal gene of the host, Jam 103 and Jam 104 in the Previous generation, and Jam 103 x Jam 103 and Jam 104 f Jam 104 in the next generation were made for the induction of virus diseases due to the transmitted virus. The frequency of cytoplasmic polyhedrosis due to the induction in the F generation was markedly higher in the cross-batches, ¡Î¡Ï and ¡Î¡Ï in which inoculated individuals were used as fem ale parents than in the cross-batches, ¡Î¡Ï and ¡Î¡Ï in which virus has been not inoculated or inoculated only to male in the previous generation. The tendency of increasing rate was observed in any treatments; such as the inoculations of cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus (105/, 106/ 107, and 108//ml ill different concentration of inocula) , cold-treatment (5, 12hrs or 24hrs), and formalin-feeding treatment (2£¥ or 3£¥). The shape of polyhedra (tetragonal in outline) examined in the F, larvae was identified as that of the inoculated polyhedra with partial application of immunofluorescent techniques. These results suggests that the cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus in B. meri L. are transmitted to the next generation through the egg, apparently in the occult state. And the experimental results of various cross-batches revealed the egg cytoplasm plays an important part i the transmission of the occult virus of the cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus,
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