September 23, 2004
By Tim Lockette,
Southeast Farm Press via
Checkbiotech.org
One of the world’s most damaging
tomato diseases may have met its match now that University of
Florida researchers have found a way to give plants resistance
to tomato yellow leaf curl virus.
A team of researchers at
University of Florida’s
Institute of Food and
Agricultural Sciences have created a genetically engineered
tomato plant that can shut down the virus, a pathogen that has
spread rapidly around the globe, devastating tomato crops and
forcing growers to increase their use of expensive and
environmentally harmful pesticides.
“If this virus appears in your field, you can easily lose your
entire crop,” said Jane Polston, a plant virologist with UF’s
Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. “And even the
growers who don’t get the virus are spending lots of money on
pesticides to stop the insect that carries the virus.”
Though it is difficult to assign a dollar figure to damage
caused by the virus, yellow leaf curl is recognized as the most
important limiting factor in many countries, Polston said.
Widely found throughout the Mediterranean region, the disease
spread to the Western Hemisphere in the early 1990s, wiping out
the entire tomato industry in the Dominican Republic.
Polston was the first scientist to identify the virus in a
Florida tomato field. That 1997 discovery created a stir among
growers, who recognized the virus as a major threat to the
nation’s tomato crop, which nets farmers more than $1 billion
each year according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The
disease is not likely to affect consumer prices for tomatoes in
the near future, due to high levels of production in Mexico and
other countries still free of the virus.
Once infected with the virus, a tomato plant stops growing
normally and no longer produces marketable fruit, meaning that
an outbreak early in the season can wipe out an entire season’
crop. The whitefly, an insect commonly found in tomato-growing
areas, can pass the virus from plant to plant with only minimal
contact.
U.S. farmers have been able to limit the disease’s damage, but
only by boosting the use of pesticides that kill the whitefly.
It’s an expensive solution, and less than ideal for an industry
looking to reduce its use of chemicals to control pests. And it
hasn’t stopped the spread of the disease, which has been found
in fields from Louisiana to North Carolina.
Even as they announced that the virus had arrived in Florida, UF
researchers had an inkling of how to stop it. Using a technique
they’d employed against a distantly related tomato virus,
Polston and UF plant pathologist Ernest Hiebert snipped a piece
off the gene that regulates replication in the tomato yellow
leaf curl virus and spliced that genetic information into tomato
plants. Their hope was that the transferred gene would give the
tomato’s immune system the ability to recognize the virus and
shut it down before it damages the plant.
The plan worked. As the researchers reported in the May issue of
the journal Phytopathology, plants with the transferred genetic
information grow normally and produce healthy fruit even after
they’re exposed to the virus.
Other institutions have produced tomato plants that resist
tomato yellow leaf curl disease, the researchers say. But those
plants, created by crossing existing tomato varieties with close
relatives of the tomato, produce fruit that is smaller and
generally lower in quality than non-resistant varieties.
“The disease-resistant cultivars that are currently in use are
good for some growers, but they’re not for everyone,” Hiebert
said. “In Florida, many people are growing tomatoes for the
restaurant market, and restaurants want big tomatoes — the kind
you slice and put on a hamburger.”
The researchers spliced the gene into a tomato breeding line
that was developed at UF and has not yet been released to the
public, but they say the gene-splicing technique can likely be
used to grant virus resistance to any tomato variety without
changing the size or quality of its fruit.
The researchers are currently seeking corporate partners to use
their technology in commercially available tomato varieties, but
it could still be years before the new virus-resistant tomatoes
hit grocery store shelves.
Commercial availability of a virus-resistant tomato can’t come
too soon for growers such as D.C. McClure, vice-president of
West Coast Tomato in Palmetto, Fla. Like many growers, West
Coast Tomato has waged costly battles with the virus ever since
it appeared in the area.
“We’ve pulled up and replanted entire fields of tomatoes this
year to stop the virus from spreading, and I’m sure we’re not
alone in doing that,” McClure said. “Everybody is dealing with
this, and the only question at this point is whether the virus
will appear early in the season or late in the season.”
McClure said his company has already experimented with earlier
disease-resistant varieties, and found them lacking.
“Whether it’s fruit size or productivity of the plant, there
always seems to be something missing,” he said. “If you can
produce a tomato plant that resists this virus and still has all
the qualities of the varieties we’re growing now, I guarantee
growers will want it.”
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