Discovery The carrot yellow-leaf virus was first isolated in
Japanese carrots that had yellowing leaves. Using electron microscopy, the virus particle was found to be 1.6006 X 1012 nm long with a 3.7-nm helical pitch. These are characteristics from the genus
Closterovirus. There was a suspected case found in the
Netherlands that was originally going to be studied because it seemed similar to CYLV, but it ended up having a different host range.
Retrospective analysis There was an attempt to
inoculate another carrot with the
sap of an infected carrot, but this was unsuccessful; the carrot did not become
immune. Attempts to grow a virus in a carrot by mechanically injecting the virus into the carrot rather than naturally infecting it through an aphid has failed to produce more virus. It may be possible to use a
PCR with degenerate primers to find
DNA from multiple pathogens of the same genus of CYLV, but this will not detect new pathogens, so CYLV cannot be specifically isolated from the PCR amplified DNA.
Significant milestones There have been major outbreaks in the
United Kingdom causing economic damage for 20 years. There have currently been no treatments developed. At this point, virologists are simply trying to fully diagnose the infection.
Current and future study and treatment Currently, virologists are working on using
high-throughput sequencing to identify novel virus genomes from a sample. This can potentially be used for diagnosis of CYLV. There is still a need to modify
Koch’s postulates to establish a cause and effect relationship between CYLV and root necrosis. This requires future experimentation using an agricultural environment to accurately mediate the transmission of the virus. A harvested virus cannot simply be placed into a healthy host and have the expected symptoms without the natural environment. Right now, CYLV is being prevented more than treated since there are no viable treatment methods yet. One method of prevention is to remove carrots with yellowing leaves so that they do not infect other carrots in the patch. Using
pesticides to kill aphids or nets to trap them will also limit the spread of the virus to other patches. ==Structure and classification==