Tomato yellow leaf curl virus Can Overwinter in Stellaria aquatica, a Winter-Hardy TYLCV-Reservoir Weed

Plant Dis. 2015 May;99(5):588-592. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-04-14-0352-RE. Epub 2015 Apr 30.

Abstract

Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV), one of the most serious plant viruses in tropical and subtropical regions, is transmitted to host plants by the vector insect Bemisia tabaci. In order to control TYLCV, it is important to identify weed hosts for overwintering TYLCV. Stellaria aquatica, a winter-hardy weed, was found growing with TYLCV-infected tomato plants in greenhouse production. TYLCV was detected in S. aquatica plants by polymerase chain reaction and Southern blot hybridization analysis. The intergenic region nucleotide sequences amplified from TYLCV-infected tomato plants, TYLCV-viruliferous whiteflies, and S. aquatica were identical. During winter (December to February), TYLCV-viruliferous whiteflies and TYLCV-infected tomato plants were removed or absent from greenhouses. However, S. aquatica plants were observed over a period of 10 months from August to May in such greenhouses, and TYLCV was consistently detected in some of these plants. To investigate the transmission of TYLCV from TYLCV-infected S. aquatica plants to healthy tomato plants by whiteflies, TYLCV-infected S. aquatica plants were transplanted to pots in cages with nonviruliferous whiteflies and healthy tomato plants. After 4 weeks, tomato plants developed typical TYLCV disease symptoms, and TYLCV was detected in both whiteflies and tomato plants. These results show that S. aquatica can act as a winter-hardy reservoir for TYLCV, and suggest that this weed could play an important role in overwintering of TYLCV in tomato greenhouses.