Published March 1, 2023 | Version v1
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Solanum elaeagnifolium and S. rostratum as potential hosts of the tomato brown rugose fruit virus

Description

Invasive weeds cause significant crop yield and economic losses in agriculture. The highest indirect impact may be attributed to the role of invasive weeds as virus reservoirs within commercial growing areas. The new tobamovirus tomato brown rugose fruit virus (ToBRFV), first identified in the Middle East, overcame the Tm-22 resistance allele of cultivated tomato varieties and caused severe damage to crops. In this study, we determined the role of invasive weed species as potential hosts of ToBRFV and a mild strain of pepino mosaic virus (PepMV-IL). Of newly tested weed species, only the invasive species Solanum elaeagnifolium and Srostratum, sap inoculated with ToBRFV, were susceptible to ToBRFV infection. Srostratum was also susceptible to PepMV-IL infection. No phenotype was observed on ToBRFV-infected Selaeagnifolium grown in the wild or following ToBRFV sap inoculation. Srostratum plants inoculated with ToBRFV contained a high ToBRFV titer compared to ToBRFV-infected Selaeagnifolium plants. Mixed infection with ToBRFV and PepMV-IL of Srostratum plants, as well as Snigrum plants (a known host of ToBRFV and PepMV), displayed synergism between the two viruses, manifested by increasing PepMV-IL levels. Additionally, when inoculated with either ToBRFV or PepMV-IL, disease symptoms were apparent in Srostratum plants and the symptoms were exacerbated upon mixed infections with both viruses. In a bioassay, ToBRFV-inoculated SelaeagnifoliumSrostratum and Snigrum plants infected tomato plants harboring the Tm-22 resistant allele with ToBRFV. The distribution and abundance of these Solanaceae species increase the risks of virus transmission between species.

This article was published in the PLOS ONE journal. The underlying datasets for this publication can be found here. This publication has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 101000570

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Funding

European Commission
VIRTIGATION – EMERGING VIRAL DISEASES IN TOMATOES AND CUCURBITS: IMPLEMENTATION OF MITIGATION STRATEGIES FOR DURABLE DISEASE MANAGEMENT 101000570