Evaluation of New Polyclonal Antibody Developed for Serological Diagnostics of Tomato Mosaic Virus

Viruses. 2022 Jun 18;14(6):1331. doi: 10.3390/v14061331.

Abstract

Plant viruses threaten agricultural production by reducing the yield, quality, and economical benefits. Tomato mosaic virus (ToMV) from the genus Tobamovirus causes serious losses in the quantity and quality of tomato production. The management of plant protection is very difficult, mainly due to the vector-less transmission of ToMV. Resistant breeding generally has low effectiveness. The most practical approach is the use of a rapid diagnostic assay of the virus' presence before the symptoms occur in plants, followed by the eradication of virus-infected plants. Such approaches also include serological detection methods (ELISA and Western immunoblotting), where antibodies need to be developed for an immunochemical reaction. The development and characterization of polyclonal antibodies for the detection of ToMV with appropriate parameters (sensitivity, specificity, and cross-reactivity) were the subjects of this study. A new polyclonal antibody, AB-1, was developed in immunized rabbits using the modified oligopeptides with antigenic potential (sequences are revealed) derived from the coat protein of ToMV SL-1. the developed polyclonal antibody. AB-1, showed higher sensitivity when compared with commercially available analogs. It also detected ToMV in infected pepper and eggplant plants, and detected another two tobamoviruses (TMV and PMMoV) and ToMV in soil rhizosphere samples and root residues, even two years after the cultivation of the infected tomato plant.

Keywords: polyclonal antibody; tobamovirus; tomato; tomato mosaic virus.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Humans
  • Plant Breeding
  • Plant Diseases
  • Plant Viruses*
  • Plants
  • Rabbits
  • Solanum lycopersicum*
  • Tobamovirus* / genetics

Supplementary concepts

  • Tomato mosaic virus

Grants and funding

This research was supported by the projects: “PandemicFood” (ITMS: 313011AVA9) supported by the Integrated Infrastructure Operational Programme funded by the European Regional Development Found and by the project APVV-20-0015 funded by Slovak Research and Development Agency.