Elucidation of virus-host interactions to enhance resistance breeding for control of virus diseases in potato

Breed Sci. 2015 Mar;65(1):69-76. doi: 10.1270/jsbbs.65.69. Epub 2015 Mar 1.

Abstract

Potato virus Y (PVY) and Potato mop-top virus (PMTV) are viruses whose geographical distribution is expanding and economic losses are increasing, in contrast to most of other viruses infecting potato crops. Most potato cultivars lack broad-spectrum resistance to the new, genetically complex strains of PVY, and no efficient resistance to PMTV is known in potato. Control of the vectors of these viruses is not an efficient or possible strategy to prevent infections. Studies on molecular virus-host interactions can discover plant genes that are important to viral infection or antiviral defence. Both types of genes may be utilized in resistance breeding, which is discussed in this paper. The advanced gene technologies provide means to fortify potato cultivars with effective virus resistance genes or mutated, non-functional host factors that interfere with virus infection.

Keywords: RNA silencing; Solanum tuberosum; gene technology; gene-for-gene resistance; marker-assisted breeding; recessive resistance; virus resistance.

Publication types

  • Review