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Eradication of Potato Virus S, Potato Virus A, and Potato Virus M From Infected in vitro-Grown Potato Shoots Using in vitro Therapies

Certain viruses dramatically affect yield and quality of potatoes and have proved difficult to eradicate with current approaches. Here, we describe a reliable and efficient virus eradication method that is high throughput and more efficacious at producing virus-free potato plants than current report...

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Autores principales: Bettoni, Jean Carlos, Mathew, Liya, Pathirana, Ranjith, Wiedow, Claudia, Hunter, Donald A., McLachlan, Andrew, Khan, Subuhi, Tang, Joe, Nadarajan, Jayanthi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9161163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35665190
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.878733
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author Bettoni, Jean Carlos
Mathew, Liya
Pathirana, Ranjith
Wiedow, Claudia
Hunter, Donald A.
McLachlan, Andrew
Khan, Subuhi
Tang, Joe
Nadarajan, Jayanthi
author_facet Bettoni, Jean Carlos
Mathew, Liya
Pathirana, Ranjith
Wiedow, Claudia
Hunter, Donald A.
McLachlan, Andrew
Khan, Subuhi
Tang, Joe
Nadarajan, Jayanthi
author_sort Bettoni, Jean Carlos
collection PubMed
description Certain viruses dramatically affect yield and quality of potatoes and have proved difficult to eradicate with current approaches. Here, we describe a reliable and efficient virus eradication method that is high throughput and more efficacious at producing virus-free potato plants than current reported methods. Thermotherapy, chemotherapy, and cryotherapy treatments were tested alone and in combination for ability to eradicate single and mixed Potato virus S (PVS), Potato virus A (PVA), and Potato virus M (PVM) infections from three potato cultivars. Chemotherapy treatments were undertaken on in vitro shoot segments for four weeks in culture medium supplemented with 100 mg L(−1) ribavirin. Thermotherapy on in vitro shoot segments was applied for two weeks at 40°C (day) and 28°C (night) with a 16 h photoperiod. Plant vitrification solution 2 (PVS2) and cryotherapy treatments included a shoot tip preculture followed by exposure to PVS2 either without or with liquid nitrogen (LN, cryotherapy) treatment. The virus status of control and recovered plants following therapies was assessed in post-regeneration culture after 3 months and then retested in plants after they had been growing in a greenhouse for a further 3 months. Microtuber production was investigated using in vitro virus-free and virus-infected segments. We found that thermotherapy and cryotherapy (60 min PVS2 + LN) used alone were not effective in virus eradication, while chemotherapy was better but with variable efficacy (20–100%). The most effective result (70–100% virus eradication) was obtained by combining chemotherapy with cryotherapy, or by consecutive chemotherapy, combined chemotherapy and thermotherapy, then cryotherapy treatments irrespective of cultivar. Regrowth following the two best virus eradication treatments was similar ranging from 8.6 to 29% across the three cultivars. The importance of virus removal on yield was reflected in “Dunluce” free of PVS having higher numbers of microtubers and in “V500’ free of PVS and PVA having a greater proportion of microtubers > 5 mm. Our improved procedure has potential for producing virus-free planting material for the potato industry. It could also underpin the global exchange of virus-free germplasm for conservation and breeding programs.
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spelling pubmed-91611632022-06-03 Eradication of Potato Virus S, Potato Virus A, and Potato Virus M From Infected in vitro-Grown Potato Shoots Using in vitro Therapies Bettoni, Jean Carlos Mathew, Liya Pathirana, Ranjith Wiedow, Claudia Hunter, Donald A. McLachlan, Andrew Khan, Subuhi Tang, Joe Nadarajan, Jayanthi Front Plant Sci Plant Science Certain viruses dramatically affect yield and quality of potatoes and have proved difficult to eradicate with current approaches. Here, we describe a reliable and efficient virus eradication method that is high throughput and more efficacious at producing virus-free potato plants than current reported methods. Thermotherapy, chemotherapy, and cryotherapy treatments were tested alone and in combination for ability to eradicate single and mixed Potato virus S (PVS), Potato virus A (PVA), and Potato virus M (PVM) infections from three potato cultivars. Chemotherapy treatments were undertaken on in vitro shoot segments for four weeks in culture medium supplemented with 100 mg L(−1) ribavirin. Thermotherapy on in vitro shoot segments was applied for two weeks at 40°C (day) and 28°C (night) with a 16 h photoperiod. Plant vitrification solution 2 (PVS2) and cryotherapy treatments included a shoot tip preculture followed by exposure to PVS2 either without or with liquid nitrogen (LN, cryotherapy) treatment. The virus status of control and recovered plants following therapies was assessed in post-regeneration culture after 3 months and then retested in plants after they had been growing in a greenhouse for a further 3 months. Microtuber production was investigated using in vitro virus-free and virus-infected segments. We found that thermotherapy and cryotherapy (60 min PVS2 + LN) used alone were not effective in virus eradication, while chemotherapy was better but with variable efficacy (20–100%). The most effective result (70–100% virus eradication) was obtained by combining chemotherapy with cryotherapy, or by consecutive chemotherapy, combined chemotherapy and thermotherapy, then cryotherapy treatments irrespective of cultivar. Regrowth following the two best virus eradication treatments was similar ranging from 8.6 to 29% across the three cultivars. The importance of virus removal on yield was reflected in “Dunluce” free of PVS having higher numbers of microtubers and in “V500’ free of PVS and PVA having a greater proportion of microtubers > 5 mm. Our improved procedure has potential for producing virus-free planting material for the potato industry. It could also underpin the global exchange of virus-free germplasm for conservation and breeding programs. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9161163/ /pubmed/35665190 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.878733 Text en Copyright © 2022 Bettoni, Mathew, Pathirana, Wiedow, Hunter, McLachlan, Khan, Tang and Nadarajan. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
Bettoni, Jean Carlos
Mathew, Liya
Pathirana, Ranjith
Wiedow, Claudia
Hunter, Donald A.
McLachlan, Andrew
Khan, Subuhi
Tang, Joe
Nadarajan, Jayanthi
Eradication of Potato Virus S, Potato Virus A, and Potato Virus M From Infected in vitro-Grown Potato Shoots Using in vitro Therapies
title Eradication of Potato Virus S, Potato Virus A, and Potato Virus M From Infected in vitro-Grown Potato Shoots Using in vitro Therapies
title_full Eradication of Potato Virus S, Potato Virus A, and Potato Virus M From Infected in vitro-Grown Potato Shoots Using in vitro Therapies
title_fullStr Eradication of Potato Virus S, Potato Virus A, and Potato Virus M From Infected in vitro-Grown Potato Shoots Using in vitro Therapies
title_full_unstemmed Eradication of Potato Virus S, Potato Virus A, and Potato Virus M From Infected in vitro-Grown Potato Shoots Using in vitro Therapies
title_short Eradication of Potato Virus S, Potato Virus A, and Potato Virus M From Infected in vitro-Grown Potato Shoots Using in vitro Therapies
title_sort eradication of potato virus s, potato virus a, and potato virus m from infected in vitro-grown potato shoots using in vitro therapies
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9161163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35665190
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.878733
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