6533b7d7fe1ef96bd12690f8
RESEARCH PRODUCT
A sensitive real-time RT-PCR reveals a high incidence of Southern tomato virus (STV) in Spanish tomato crops
Ana Alfaro-fernándezLuis RubioC. CarpinoRosa PeiróMaría Isabel Font San AmbrosioLuis GalipiensoLaura Elvira-gonzálezsubject
0301 basic medicineBiologySolanum lycopersicum; Amalgaviridae; Amalgavirus; persistent viruses; RT-qPCRViruslcsh:Agriculture03 medical and health sciencesSolanum lycopersicumTranscription (biology)Plant virusGene expressionPRODUCCION VEGETALGenePersistent virusesfungiRT-qPCRlcsh:SRNAfood and beveragesMICROBIOLOGIAagriculture; plant protectionAmalgaviridaeVirologyRNA silencingAmalgavirusGENETICA030104 developmental biologyReal-time polymerase chain reactionAgronomy and Crop Sciencedescription
[EN] Southern tomato virus (STV) is a double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) virus belonging to genus Amalgavirus (family Amalgamaviridae). STV has been detected in tomato plants showing different symptoms although it has not been demonstrated that STV is the causal agent. To study the STV incidence and its pathogenic role, a sensitive and quantitative real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assay (RT-qPCR) was developed. The standard curve perfonned with viral RNA transcripts allowed a wide dynamic range for STV quantitation from 10(4) to 10(11) copies/ng of total RNA. STV detection by RT-qPCR was 10(2)-fold more sensitive than conventional RT-PCR or RT-LAMP and 10(4)-fold more sensitive than molecular hybridization. STV was detected in different tomato plant tissues, as well as in the coat and the embryo of individual seeds. Also, viral concentration remained constant over time in leaf tissues of STV-infected tomato plants. Surveys on different tomato fields from Spain revealed that STV was widespread. In addition, the virus was detected in almost every tomato variety and nursery analyzed. STV-infected tomato plants did not show any disease-related symptom suggesting that the virus was not directly the causal agent of any tomato disease. However, there is no information about the STV effect in mixed infections or in abiotic stressed conditions and further studies must be performed to clarify it The RT-qPCR assay developed in this work could be implemented on sanitation programs in order to limit the virus spread and could be used to study the effect of STV in mix infections or abiotic stressed conditions.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-12-19 |