Tomato brown rugose fruit virus in aqueous environments - survival and significance of water-mediated transmission

Front Plant Sci. 2023 Jun 2:14:1187920. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1187920. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Tomato brown rugose fruit virus (ToBRFV) has recently emerged as a major disease of tomatoes and peppers. ToBRFV is a seed- and contact-transmitted virus. In Slovenia, ToBRFV RNA was detected in samples of wastewater, river, and water used to irrigate plants. Even though the source of detected RNA could not be clearly established, this raised the question of the significance of the detection of ToBRFV in water samples and experimental studies were performed to address this question. The data presented here confirm that the release of virus particles from the roots of infected plants is a source of infectious ToBRFV particles in water and that the virus can remain infective up to four weeks in water stored at room temperature, while its RNA can be detected for much longer. These data also indicate that irrigation with ToBRFV-contaminated water can lead to plant infection. In addition, it has been shown that ToBRFV circulated in drain water in commercial tomato greenhouses from other European countries and that an outbreak of ToBRFV can be detected by regular monitoring of drain water. A simple method for concentrating ToBRFV from water samples and a comparison of the sensitivity of different methods, including the determination of the highest ToBRFV dilution still capable of infecting test plants, were also investigated. The results of our studies fill the knowledge gaps in the epidemiology and diagnosis of ToBRFV, by studying the role of water-mediated transmission, and provide a reliable risk assessment to identify critical points for monitoring and control.

Keywords: hydroponics; survival; tomato; tomato brown rugose fruit virus; water-linked epidemiology.

Grants and funding

Experiments in quarantine greenhouse were carried out within the framework of the national applied research project L4-3179 (Discovery and water-linked epidemiology of emergent tobamoviruses infecting crops) funded by the Slovenian Research Agency, the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Food of the Republic of Slovenia and BIA d.o.o. Laboratory and process equipment company (Ljubljana, Slovenia). Water samples taken from Slovenian rivers and irrigation waters have been analyzed in the frame of national official monitoring funded by the Administration of the Republic of Slovenia for Food Safety, Veterinary Sector and Plant Protection, and in the frame of Horizon 2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Innovative Training Network (H2020 MSCA-ITN) project “INEXTVIR” (GA 813542) under the management of the European Commission-Research Executive Agency and from the Slovenian Research Agency (ARRS), Republic of Slovenia core financing (P4-0407 and P4-0165). Analyses of water samples from commercial greenhouses with ToBRFV outbreaks were carried out within the Operational group PraKeTo EIP-2021-31 funded by the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development. Greenhouse experiments at Fera, UK, were supported with funding from UK Government, Department of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs research framework “Future Proofing Plant Health”.