New Disease Reports (2009) 19, 30.

Columnea latent viroid (CLVd) in tomato: the first report in the United Kingdom

T Nixon 1, R Glover 1, S Mathews-Berry 1, M Daly 1, E Hobden 1, C Lambourne 2, V Harju 1 and A Skelton 1*

*a.skelton@csl.gov.uk

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Accepted: 08 Apr 2009

In May 2007 a tomato plant (Lycopersicum esculentum) cv. Santa from a glasshouse crop in northwest England was submitted to the Central Science Laboratory (now Fera). Symptoms included severe leaf distortion, bronzing and ‘crunchy’ leaf (Fig. 1). ELISA tests for Tomato spotted wilt virus, Impatiens necrotic spot virus, Pepino mosaic virus and Tomato mosaic virus were negative and examination by electron microscopy revealed no virus particles. The sample was tested for viroids using a new Scorpion real-time PCR test developed at CSL (unpublished data), designed to detect all pospiviroids. The sample tested positive for Columnea latent viroid (CLVd) and negative for other pospiviroids. The sample was also tested by conventional RT-PCR, using primers to detect a broad range of pospiviroids (Verhoeven et al., 2004). A product of the expected size (350bp) was obtained and confirmed to be CLVd by nucleotide sequence comparison (99% nt identity) (GenBank Accession No. FJ394071).

CLVd has since been confirmed at three further sites in cv. Santa: one in the same stock at the initial outbreak site, but in a different location; one in northeast England (FJ394070) and another in Worcestershire (FJ394072). CLVd sequence data were identical from all three sampling sites. Since the intraspecific variation for all CLVd sequences is 8.22% (GenBank) this suggests that the four UK outbreaks have a common source.

CLVd has previously been found in tomatoes in the Netherlands and Belgium (Verhoeven et al., 2004) but CLVd had not been previously recorded in the UK. At one site it was estimated that by the end of the growing season (November 2007), 50-60% of the crop was infected. Initial assessments at CSL suggested that CLVd posed a threat to tomato and possibly potato production in the UK. Statutory plant health action was immediately taken to control the outbreaks and by the end of the 2008 cropping season, CLVd was declared eradicated from the UK.

Figure1+
Figure 1: CLVd from one of the UK outbreak sites: (left) showing a much thinner stem, (right) showing a close up of the bronzing symptom and the ‘crunchy’ leaf symptom with severe necrosis and distortion. Images courtesy of Sharon Mathews-Berry (CSL).
Figure 1: CLVd from one of the UK outbreak sites: (left) showing a much thinner stem, (right) showing a close up of the bronzing symptom and the ‘crunchy’ leaf symptom with severe necrosis and distortion. Images courtesy of Sharon Mathews-Berry (CSL).
Figure2+
Figure 2: Neighbour-joining tree showing the placement of the outbreak samples to other CLVd sequences from GenBank and their relationship to both TCDVd and PSTVd.
Figure 2: Neighbour-joining tree showing the placement of the outbreak samples to other CLVd sequences from GenBank and their relationship to both TCDVd and PSTVd.

References

  1. Verhoeven JThJ, Jansen CCC, Willemen TM, Kox LFF, Owens RA, Roenhorst JW, 2004. Natural infections of tomato by Citrus exocortis viroid, Columnea latent viroid, Potato spindle tuber viroid and Tomato chlorotic dwarf viroid. European Journal of Plant Pathology 110, 823-831.

This report was formally published in Plant Pathology

©2009 The Authors