New Disease Reports (2013) 27, 13. [http://dx.doi.org/10.5197/j.2044-0588.2013.027.013]
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First detection of European mountain ash ringspot-associated virus in rowan trees in Scotland

J. Robel, L. Dieckmann, S. von Bargen* and C. Büttner

*susanne.von.bargen@agrar.hu-berlin.de

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Received: 30 Oct 2012; Published: 10 Apr 2013

Keywords: RT-PCR, Sorbus aucuparia

Sorbus aucuparia (European mountain ash, rowan) is native to most parts of Europe. In the uplands of Scotland, rowan trees are associated with the native Caledonian pinewoods and are most abundant on the mountain and coastal fringes of the Northwest. Because of its hardiness, the European mountain ash is an important foundation species that fundamentally contributes to the biodiversity of woods (Raspe et al., 2000). Virus-like symptoms on rowan trees such as chlorotic ringspots and leaf mottling were first described six decades ago and have also been reported to occur frequently in mountain ash trees in the United Kingdom (Cooper, 1993). In 2007 these symptoms were associated with European mountain ash ringspot-associated virus (EMARaV), the type-species of the newly created Genus Emaravirus (Mühlbach & Mielke-Ehret, 2011). During July 2011 chlorotic spots, ringspots, oak leaf line pattern and mottling (Fig. 1) were observed in leaves of 23 mountain ash trees in different geographic regions of Scotland. Trees with indicative symptoms were found in urban areas (Dunvegan, Inverness, Killin, Lawers) as well as in the countryside, growing as roadside trees, as understory in the woods, or in mountainous regions at higher altitudes.

To confirm the presence of EMARaV, symptom-bearing leaflets of S. aucuparia collected in four different locations of the coastal northwestern highlands were subject to total RNA isolation and tested for EMARaV by RT-PCR using RNA2- and RNA3-specific primer pairs according to Mielke et al. (2008). Amplicons of the expected size (300 bp, RNA2; 204 bp, RNA3) were generated from five out of six analysed samples. Fragments were bi-directionally sequenced and the resulting consensus sequences were subjected to a database search applying BLASTn. Analyses revealed highest sequence identities of the 300 bp fragment (96-97%) with the RNA2-encoded glycoprotein precursor of the EMARaV-type strain from Germany (GenBank Accession No. AY563041), and 97-99% identity of the 204 bp sequence with the 3´ untranslated region (3´ UTR) of vRNA3 of an isolate from Finland (EU885289), respectively. Obtained sequences were deposited in EMBL-Bank (HF536523-HF536532). In a neighbour-joining phylogenetic tree generated from the partial RNA2 encoding the putative glycoprotein precursor of EMARaV, the sequence variants obtained from Scottish trees formed a distinct cluster (Fig. 2). Comparison of the partial 3´ UTR of the RNA3 encoding the nucleocapsid protein of the virus did not corroborate the separate grouping of Scottish EMARaV variants. Phylogenetic analyses produced two clusters, one including four Scottish samples grouping with the single Russian and with three of the Finnish accessions (Kallinen et al., 2009, Valkonen & Rännäli, 2010). One sequence variant obtained from Scotland clustered together with other EMARaV variants identified in Finnish rowan trees as well as sequences originating from locations in Germany, Sweden, and the Czech Republic stored in GenBank (DQ831831, FR751461, FR751462, HE819379-HE819388). However, clustering was not supported by bootstrap values above 700 (data not shown). EMARaV was never recorded in Great Britain. Here, we report the first detection of the virus from rowan exhibiting chlorotic ringspots in leaves of the Scottish council areas Perth and Kinross, Stirling, and Highland. The Plant Health Service of the Forestry Commission of Great Britain was informed about the presence of EMARaV in diseased rowan trees in Scotland.

Figure1+
Figure 1: Symptoms observed in mountain ash trees in Scotland. Bright chlorotic ringspots (Loch Tummel, Perth and Kinross, left), chlorotic ringspots restricted to one side of the leaf (Ullapool Hill, Highland, middle), and chlorotic oak leaf pattern (Killiecrankie, Perth and Kinross, right).
Figure 1: Symptoms observed in mountain ash trees in Scotland. Bright chlorotic ringspots (Loch Tummel, Perth and Kinross, left), chlorotic ringspots restricted to one side of the leaf (Ullapool Hill, Highland, middle), and chlorotic oak leaf pattern (Killiecrankie, Perth and Kinross, right).
Figure2+
Figure 2: Phylogenetic tree inferred from the nucleotide sequence alignment (261 bp) of the partial glycoprotein precursor-encoding region of RNA2 of European mountain ash ringspot-associated virus applying the neighbour-joining algorithm. Bootstrap analysis was performed with 1000 repetitions and values above 700 are indicated at branches. The scale bar of 0.005 represents 5 nucleotide substitutions per 1000 nucleotides of the aligned sequences. Sequences obtained from the NCBI database are indicated by their accession numbers.
Figure 2: Phylogenetic tree inferred from the nucleotide sequence alignment (261 bp) of the partial glycoprotein precursor-encoding region of RNA2 of European mountain ash ringspot-associated virus applying the neighbour-joining algorithm. Bootstrap analysis was performed with 1000 repetitions and values above 700 are indicated at branches. The scale bar of 0.005 represents 5 nucleotide substitutions per 1000 nucleotides of the aligned sequences. Sequences obtained from the NCBI database are indicated by their accession numbers.

References

  1. Cooper JI, 1993. Virus diseases of trees and shrubs. 2nd edition. London, UK: Chapman and Hall.
  2. Kallinen AK, Lindberg IL, Tugume AK, Valkonen JPT, 2009. Detection, distribution, and genetic variability of European mountain ash ringspot-associated virus. Phytopathology 99, 344-352. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PHYTO-99-4-0344 ]
  3. Mielke N, Weber M, Khan S, Mühlbach HP, 2008. Detection of European mountain ash ringspot-associated virus (EMARAV) in Sorbus aucuparia L. by a specific antiserum and reserve transcription-PCR. Forest Pathology 38, 371-380. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0329.2008.00553.x]
  4. Mühlbach HP, Mielke-Ehret N, 2011. Emaravirus. In: King AMQ, Adams MJ, Carstens EB, Lefkowitz EJ, eds. Virus Taxonomy: Ninth Report of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses. London, UK: Elsevier Academic Press, 767-770.
  5. Raspé O, Findlay C, Jacquemart AL, 2000. Sorbus aucuparia L. Journal of Ecology 88, 910-930.
  6. Valkonen JPT, Rännäli M, 2010. First report of European mountain ash ringspot-associated virus in Sorbus aucuparia from Eastern Karelia, Russia. Plant Disease 94, 921. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-94-7-0921B]

To cite this report: Robel J, Dieckmann L, von Bargen S, Büttner C, 2013. First detection of European mountain ash ringspot-associated virus in rowan trees in Scotland. New Disease Reports 27, 13. [http://dx.doi.org/10.5197/j.2044-0588.2013.027.013]

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