News section
First report of wheat dwarf virus in winter wheat in Finland

A ProMED-mail post
ProMED-mail is a program of the International Society for Infectious Diseases

August 20, 2005
From: ProMED-mail <promed@promedmail.org>
Source: American Phytopathological Society, Plant Disease Notes [edited]

First report of wheat dwarf virus in winter wheat in Finland
A. Lemmetty and E. Huusela-Veistola, MTT Agrifood Research Finland, Plant Protection, FIN-31600 Jokioinen, Finland. Plant Dis. 89:912, 2005; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-89-0912B. Accepted for publication 17
May 2005.


During June and July of 2004, several diseased plants in winter wheat (_Triticum aestivum_ L.) were reported by agricultural advisers in the southern and southwestern coastal area of Finland. The plants showed extreme dwarfing, various yellowing symptoms, and reduced or no heading. The damage varied considerably.

Yield loss estimates in direct-drilled winter wheat fields were approximately 20 to 40 percent and in worst cases as much as 100 percent. A few leafhoppers (_Psammotettix alienus_ Dahlb.) were collected from the field with sweep nets and yellow traps.

Roots and symptomatic leaves of winter wheat and the leafhoppers were first tested using a commercial polyclonal antibody (DSMZ, Braunschweig, Germany) specific for Wheat dwarf virus (WDV). For the leaf and root samples, routine double-antibody sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (DAS-ELISA) procedures were used. 5 leafhoppers per sample were homogenized with the extraction buffer provided. The homogenate was centrifuged and the extract was evaluated using DAS-ELISA (2). The highest absorbance values were obtained from leafhoppers suspected to be viruliferous. The mean values varied from 1.002 to 1.990 after incubation in the substrate for 2 h.

The absorbance values of several leaf samples exceeded the virus-positive threshold but were lower than those of the viruliferous leafhoppers. The virus was not detected in roots. Low absorbance values of virus-positive plants were confirmed using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with primers specific for WDV (1). Total DNA extracts (DNeasy Plant Mini Kit; Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) from symptomatic leaves were tested using puRe Taq Ready-To-Go PCR beads (Amersham Biosciences, Buckinghamshire, UK). The PCR amplicon was the expected size (1201 bp). The high absorbance value of the leafhoppers showed that the leafhoppers were carriers of the virus.

These results confirmed that the causal agent of dwarfing and yellowing symptoms in winter wheat was WDV (genus _Mastrevirus_, family _Geminiviridae_).

References:
(1) A. Kvarnheden et al. Arch Virol 147:205, 2002.
(2) J. Vacke and R. Cibulka. Plant Prot. Sci. 35:41, 2000.

--
ProMED-mail
<promed@promedmail.org>

[In Sweden, Wheat dwarf geminivirus virus (WDV) is periodically an important pest on wheat. It is transmitted by the insect _Psammotettix alienus_, family _Cicadellidae_. The genetic diversity among wheat-infecting isolates of WDV was found to be low throughout Sweden and Europe, while WDV isolates infecting barley were distinctly different. WDV was also identified in samples of wild grasses and the insect vector. WDV spreads in Bulgaria, the former Czechoslovakia, France, Hungary, and the former USSR; found, but with no evidence of spread, in Sweden.

Link: <http://www2.vbsg.slu.se/rap04/prog2/AndersK_epidemiology.html> - Mod.DH]

[see also in the
archive:
2001
----
Cereal viruses, barley, wheat - Tunisia 20010829.2049]

ISID/ProMED-mail post news item

Other releases from this source

13,229

Back to main news page

The news release or news item on this page is copyright © 2005 by the organization where it originated.
The content of the SeedQuest website is copyright © 1992-2005 by
SeedQuest - All rights reserved
Fair Use Notice