Title
Reaction of potato varieties to Potato mop-top virus infection in the Andes
Date Issued
01 September 2006
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
International Potato Center (CIP)
International Potato Center (CIP)
Abstract
The unexpected detection of Potato mop-top virus (PMTV) in potatoes growing at several locations in the U.S.A. and Canada in 2002 has led to the realization that this soil-borne virus may be widespread throughout the potato-producing regions of both countries. A lack of information concerning the response of U.S. cultivars to PMTV infection caused us to examine the effects of PMTV on field-grown plants at three locations in the Peruvian Andes where the virus and its fungal vector, Spongospora subterranea, are endemic. All 21 U.S. cultivars tested proved susceptible to PMTV infection, especially at La Victoria where the overall incidence of both PMTV and powdery scab was high. Symptom expression in the foliage proved to be an unreliable indicator of virus infection, and thus, more reliable serological (NCM-ELISA) and nucleic acid-based techniques (NASH and RT-PCR) were used to monitor tuber tissue for the presence of PMTV. As much as 25% of field-grown tubers of cvs Kennebec, Monona, and Norland were infected with PMTV, but no correlation between virus infection and either the incidence or severity of powdery scab for any variety was apparent. Although PMTV infection did not result in the appearance of spraing or other internal necrotic reactions resembling those reported from many North American and European locations, a disproportionate proportion of infected tubers did exhibit a reticulate surface cracking. In hydroponic culture, the proportion of cracked tubers increased dramatically when the nutrient solution was seeded with virus-infested S. subterranea. Comparatively few tubers of cvs Monona and Russet Burbank exhibited this surface cracking, suggesting that these two varieties may be somewhat tolerant to PMTV infection.
Start page
423
End page
431
Volume
83
Issue
5
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Protección y nutrición de las plantas Agronomía
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-33845428848
Source
American Journal of Potato Research
ISSN of the container
1099209X
Sponsor(s)
La inesperada deteccidn del virus mop-top de la papa (PMTV) en cultivos de diferentes localidades en EUA y Canad~ en el 2002, ha hecho pensar que los virus transmitidos por el suelo pueden estar diseminados por todas las regiones productoras de papa de ambos paises. La falta de informaci6n relativa a la respuesta de los cultivares U.S. a la infecci6n de PMTV nos indujeron a examinar los efectos de este virus sobre plantas en el campo en tres localidades de los Andes peruanos, donde su vector el hongo Spongospora subterrdnea es end~mico. Los 21 cultivares probados fueron suscepti-bles a la infecci6n por PMTV, especialmente en La Victoria donde la incidencia de ambos, PMTV y rofia fue alta. La expresi6n de los slntomas en el follaje, probaron no ser indicadores conflables de la infecci6n del virus, por lo tanto se utilizaron pruebas serol6gicas (NCM-ELISA) y la t~cnica basada en ~cido nucleico (NASH y RT-PCR) para monitorear la presencia de PMTV en el tub~rculo. El 25% de los tub~rculos de Kennebec, Monona y Norland cultivados en campo estuvieron infectados con el virus, pero no se observ6 correlaci6n alguna entre la infecci6n de1 virus y la incidencia de rofia en ninguna de las variedades. Aunque la infecci6n de PMTV no produjo agrietamientos o cualquler otra reacci6n necr~tica interna del tuberculo como la reportada en otros lugares
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus