DOI: 10.17344/acsi.2018.4585 Acta Chim. Slov. 2019, 66, 45-49 ^creative ^commons Scientific paper The Titre of the Virus in the Inoculum Affects the Titre of the Viral RNA in the Host Plant and the Occurrence of the Disease Symptoms Maruša Pompe-Novak,* Maja Križnik and Kristina Gruden National Institute of Biology, Ljubljana, Slovenia * Corresponding author: E-mail: marusa.pompe.novak@nib.si Received: 07-04-2018 Dedicated to the memory of Prof. Dr. Igor Kregar Abstract Potato virus Y (PVY) is the most economically important potato virus, therefore extensive research is focusing on elucidation of its interaction with the host. To obtain repeatable results, strict standardization of research methods is crucial. Mechanical inoculation by rubbing sap from a PVY infected plant onto the leaf surface together with a fine abrasive powder is the most convenient way of experimental transmission of PVY to host plants. However, factors determining reproducibility of this process need to be determined. In the present study, it was shown that higher titre of the virus in the inoculum resulted in faster increase of PVYntn RNA titre in the inoculated leaves, as well as in faster translocation of PVYntn from inoculated leaves into upper non-inoculated leaves. The final titre of PVYNTN RNA in upper non-inoculated leaves was independent of the virus titre in the inoculum. In addition, the occurrence of the disease symptoms was followed and the dependence to the titre of the virus in the inoculum was observed. Keywords: Potato virus Y; PVY; potato; mechanical inoculation; inoculum; virus titre; symptoms 1. Introduction Potato virus Y (PVY) is the most economically important potato virus affecting potato production worldwide1 and it was classified as one of ten most important plant viruses overall.2 In sensitive potato cultivars, it can cause potato tuber necrosis ring spot disease.3 On the green part of a plant, local lesions, chlorosis, mosaic, crinkling, systemic necrosis, leaf drop and plant death can appear.4 The outcome of the interaction depends on genotypes of both, potato host plant and PVY pathogen. In addition, the response of a potato towards PVY infection can vary with various environmental conditions and various developmental and physiological growth stages of a plant.5 PVY infected potato plants can exhibit either a compatible or an incompatible response.6 Plants exhibiting a compatible interaction are susceptible and the virus can replicate and invade the plants.7 Susceptible potato plants can be either sensitive or tolerant to PVY infection. Sensitive potato plants develop disease symptoms, while tolerant plants develop no or very mild symptoms, although they can accumulate high titre of the virus.8 In an incompatible interaction, plants resist the virus by restricting cell invasion, virus replication and/or virus spread. Plants can respond to virus infection with an extreme resistance (ER) or a hypersensitive response (HR). In the case of ER, potato plants show no symptoms or very limited necrosis in the form of pinpoint lesions.9 Virus titres remain extremely low, below the limit of detection also in the initially infected leaf.9,10,11,12 In the case of HR, virus translocation from the initially infected leaf to other parts of the plant is prevented, although the virus replication and initial cell-to-cell movement are not blocked. Later, most of the infected cells die, which result in a localised necrotic lesion at the site of infection.12,13 In the natural environment, PVY is transmitted by sap-feeding aphid vector, or vegetatively through propagated potato tubers. Experimentally, PVY can be transmitted by mechanical means such as grafting or rubbing of a sap from a PVY infected plant onto the leaf surface together with a fine abrasive powder, e.g. carborundum.14 The latter method is a convenient mean for experimental transmission of the PVY to host plants, although strict standardization of the method is crucial for repeatable re- Novak et al.: The Titre of the Virus in the Inoculum Affects 48 Acta Chim. Slov. 2019, 66, 45-49 suits. The aim of the present study was to investigate the relation between the titre of the virus in the inoculum and the titre of the viral RNA in the host plant, and additionally to determine whether there is the correlation between PVY titre in the inoculum and induction of disease symptom development in inoculated plants. 2. Experimental 96 virus free potato plants (Solanum tuberosum L.) of cultivar Desiree and 105 virus free plants of cv. Igor from stem node tissue culture (cultivated for 2 weeks) were planted in soil and kept at 21 ± 2 °C in growth chambers, with illumination at 70 ^Mm-2s-1 (Osram L36W/77 lamp), a photoperiod of 16 h and relative humidity 70%. After 4 weeks, three bottom leaves of each plant were mechanically inoculated by rubbing the inoculum onto the leaf surface together with a fine abrasive powder of carborundum (0.037 mm). Inoculum was prepared by grinding PVYNTN (NIB-NTN isolate, AJ585342, referred also as NTN-Slo Isolate15) infected plants of cv. Pentland Squire from node tissue culture in the grinding buffer (0.02 M phosphate buffer, 0.01 M DETC, pH 7.6) in the ratios (w/v) 1:5, 1:10, 1:50 and 1:100. For control mock inoculation, healthy plants of cv. Pentland Squire from node tissue culture were ground in the grinding buffer in the ratio (w/v) 1:5. After 10 min incubation, the inoculum was washed from the leaf surface by tap water. On potato plants of cv. Igor disease symptom development was monitored at 0, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10 and 14 days post inoculation (dpi). At the same time points, samples from three plants per treatment were collected for the quantification of PVY RNA. For that purpose, the right distal quarter of the second inoculated leaf and the right distal quarter of the second upper non-inoculated leaf were collected and further analysed separately from each plant of cv. Desiree.. Collected leaf tissues were frozen immediately in liquid nitrogen and stored at -80 °C for further analysis. Plant tissue was homogenised by Tissue Lyser (Qia-gen, Hilden, Germany). RNA was isolated by MagMAX™ Plant RNA Isolation Kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) including DNAse treatment. RNA concentration, quality, and purity were assessed using agarose gel electrophoresis and NanoDrop ND-1000 spectrophotom-eter (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA) . RT-qPCR reactions were performed on 2 ^l of extracted RNA in a total volume of 10 ^l using the Ag-Path-IDTM One-Step RT-PCR Kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Primer and probe concentrations, together with PCR amplification conditions, were as in Kogovsek et al.16 Two dilutions of RNA were analysed, each in duplicate. Reactions were carried out using the ABI 7900HT Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). RT-qPCR conditions included a reverse transcription step (10 min at 48 °C) followed by 40 amplification cycles (1 min at 60 °C, 15 s at 95 °C). Data were analysed using the SDS v 2.3 software (ABI, Foster City, CA, USA). PVY RNA amount was quantified using a relative standard curve method by normalization to the endogenous control cox mRNA by quantGenius.17 The significance of differences (p < 0.05) between mean values was determined by the Student's t-test. 3. Results and Discussion The titre of PVYNTN RNA was studied in potato host plants of tolerant cv. Désireé after inoculation with the inocula obtained by grinding PVYNTN infected plant tissue in grinding buffer in different ratios (w/v), 1:5, 1:10 and 1:100, and therefore containing different titres of PVYNTN. The amount of PVYNTN RNA detected immediately after inoculation (0 dpi) correlated with the titre of PVYNTN in the inoculum, indicating that the remnants of PVYNTN RNA on the leaf surface after washing the inoculum was detected. From 0 dpi to 4 dpi the detected amount of PVYNTN RNA decreased (Figure 1) due to degradation of PVYNTN RNA on the leaf surface. It was already demonstrated in previous studies18 that it is possible to detect the traces of the inoculum on the leaf surface of extremely resistant cv. Santé (in which PVY cannot multiply) even at 14 dpi; and to detect viral RNA in dry inoculum 12 days after its preparation. Double-stranded RNA products shown to arise during viral replication of Potyviridae19,20 can explain the stability of viral RNA. It is hypothesised that PVY enters the initial potato cells for further multiplication through broken leaf hairs Figure 1. The relative amount of PVYNTN RNA measured by RT-qPCR in the inoculated leaves of cv. Desiree from 0 to 7 dpi. Error bars represent the standard error (n = 3). Statistical comparison was made between plants inoculated with the inoculum in which PVYNTN infected potato sap was diluted in buffer in the ratio 1:100 and plants inoculated with the inocula in which PVYNTN infected potato sap was diluted in buffer in the ratios 1:5 or 1:10. Statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) are indicated with.* Novak et al.: The Titre of the Virus in the Inoculum Affects Acta Chim. Slov. 2019, 66, 45-49 47 (broken by rubbing at mechanical inoculation). At 5 dpi the amount of newly multiplied PVYNTN RNA exceeded the amount of PVYNTN RNA in the remnants of the inoculum on the leaf surface of the plants inoculated with the inocula in which PVYNTN infected potato sap was diluted in buffer in the ratios 1:5 or 1:10 (Figure 1). From 5 to 7 dpi, higher PVYNTN RNA titres were observed in plants inoculated with more concentrated inoculum (Figure 1). In leaves, inoculated with the inoculum in which PVYNTN infected potato sap was diluted in buffer in the ratio 1:100, the titre of PVYNTN probably increased later than 7 dpi, as also the translocation of PVYNTN from inoculated into upper noninoculated leaves occurred later (Figure 2). In inoculated leaves of potato the concentrical distribution of PVY around the point of infection was shown during HR.12 In inoculated leaves of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) cv. Xanthi movement of PVY from initially inoculated cells to neighbour cells in concentrical circles, loading of PVY into the veins and translocation of PVY into upper non-inoculated leaves was shown in tolerant interaction.21 Our results in tolerant potato-PVY interaction showed that the translocation of PVYNTN from inoculated into upper non-inoculated leaves of potato cv. Desiree occurred regardless of the virus titre in the inoculum, while the speed of the process was dependent on the virus titre in the inoculum (Figure 2). Although the multiplication of PVYntn in inoculated leaves and the translocation of PVYntn from inoculated into upper non-inoculated leaves was slower in the case of lower viral titre in the inoculum, the final titre of PVYNTN RNA in upper non-inoculated leaves 14 dpi was independent of the virus titre in the inoculum (Figure 2). Even much longer times (a few months) are required for the spread of PVYNTN from nutrient solution containing extremely low titre of PVYNTN, through the roots, to the green parts of the plants as shown in experiments using a hydroponic system.22 Additionally, the disease symptom development after inoculation with different PVYNTN titre was monitored on potato plants of cv. Igor, which is one of the most susceptible and sensitive potato varieties to PVYNTN. A few days after infection, local lesions appeared on inoculated leaves, followed by leaf chlorosis (yellowing of the leaves) and leaf drop of inoculated leaves. In general, the severity of the disease symptoms correlated with the titre of PVYN-TN in the inoculum. The appearance and the development of disease symptoms was slower in the plants inoculated with lower titre of PVYNTN in the inoculum (Figure 3), what is shown also by the correlation between the titre of PVYntn in the inoculum and the leaf drop (Figure 4). By 14 dpi, all 3 inoculated leaves dropped in plants inoculated with the inocula diluted in the ratios 1:5 or 1:10. At the same time, in plants inoculated with the inocula diluted in the ratios 1:50 or 1:100 only the 1st and the 2nd inoculated leaf dropped, while the 3rd inoculated leaf showed more severe symptoms in plants inoculated with the inoculum diluted in the ratio 1:50 as compared to the plants inoculated with the inoculum diluted in the ratio 1:100 (Figure 3). No symptoms appeared on control potato plants, where also no leaf drop was observed at 14 dpi (Figure 3, right panel). Besides the high titre of PVYNTN in the inoculum, also too much carborudum or too excessive rubbing at mechanical inoculation promotes the leaf drop on inoculated plants (data not shown). Early leaf drop of inoculated leaves can prevent the spread of the virus to upper non-inoculated leaves and the development of symptoms in upper non-inoculated leaves. In PVYNTN - cv. Igor interaction, the absence of symptoms in upper non-inoculated leaves indicates with a high probability the absence of the virus in upper non-inoculated leaves. Although the plants are kept in the same growth chamber controlled environment with the same tempera- time (days post inoculation) Figure 2. The relative amount of PVYNTN RNA measured by RT-qPCR in upper non-inoculated leaves of cv. Desiree from 6 to 14 dpi. Error bars represent the standard error (n = 3). Statistical comparison was made between plants inoculated with the inoculum in which PVYNTN infected potato sap was diluted in buffer in the ratio 1:100 and plants inoculated with the inocula in which PVYNTN infected potato sap was diluted in buffer in the ratios 1:5 or 1:10. None of the differences was statistically significant (p < 0.05). Novak et al.: The Titre of the Virus in the Inoculum Affects ... 48 Acta Chim. Slov. 2019, 66, 45-49 Figure 3. Disease symptoms on potato plants of cv. Igor at 14 days after inoculation with the inocula in which PVYNTN infected potato sap was diluted in buffer in the ratios 1:5 (left), 1:10 (second from the left), 1:50 (middle) or 1:100 (second from the right); and control potato plants (right). Figure 4. The average number of dropped inoculated leaves per plant in cv. Igor after infection with PVYNTN from 0 dpi to 14 dpi. Error bars represent the standard error (n = 3). Statistical comparison was made between plants inoculated with the inoculum in which PVYNTN infected potato sap was diluted in buffer in the ratio 1:100 and plants inoculated with the inocula in which PVYNTN infected potato sap was diluted in buffer in the ratios 1:50, 1:10 or 1:5. Statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) are indicated with.* ture, relative humidity, illumination and photoperiod, the plant's response to viral infection (including the development of symptoms) can vary between experiments (biological repetitions) due to yet unknown parameters (e.g. physiological state of the plant, season...). 4. Conclusions We can conclude that higher titre of PVYNTN in the inoculum resulted in faster increase of PVYNTN RNA titre in the inoculated leaves and in faster translocation of PVYntn from inoculated leaves into upper non-inoculated leaves. The final amount of PVYNTN RNA in upper noninoculated leaves was independent of PVYNTN titre in the inoculum. In addition, the occurrence of the disease symptoms was slower in the plants inoculated with lower titre of PVYntn in the inoculum as compared to the plants inoculated with higher titre of PVYNTN in the inoculum. Thus to obtain reproducible results of any biochemical, physiological or molecular study of potato - PVY interaction one should use standardised titre of the virus in the inoculum. 5. Acknowledgment The research was financially supported by the Slovenian Research Agency (research core funding No. P4-0165). The authors thank Tjaša Cof, Mihaela Leupušček and Živa Marinko, who joined to the research as students; and Neža Turnšek for technical help. 6. References 1. A. V. Karasev, S. M. Gray, Annu. Rev. Phytopathol. 2013, 51, 571586. DOI: 10.1146/annurev-phyto-082712-102332 2. K. B. Scholthof, S. Adkins, H. Czosnek, P. Palukaitis, E. Jac-quot, T. Hohn, B. Hohn, K. Saunders, T. Candresse, P. Ahl-quist, C. Hemenway, G.D. Foster. Mol Plant Pathol. 2011, 12, 938-954. 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Križnik, D. Dobnik, K. Gruden, E. Jacquot, M. Ravnikar, Mol. Plant Microbe. Interact. 2015, 28, 739-750. DOI:10.1094/MPMI-07-14-0218-TA 22. N. Mehle, I. Gutierrez-Aguirre, N. Prezelj, D. Delic, U. Vidic, M. Ravnikar, Applied and environmental microbiology 2014, 80, 1455-1462. DOI:10.1128/AEM.03349-13 Povzetek Virus krompirja Y (Potato virus Y, PVY) je ekonomsko najpomembnejši virus krompirja, zato se številne raziskave osre-dotočajo na študij interakcije PVY z gostiteljsko rastlino. Za zagotavljanje ponovljivosti rezultatov je pomembna standardizacija raziskovalnih metod. Najpogostejši način prenosa PVY na gostiteljsko rastlino v eksperimentalnih pogojih je mehanska inokulacija, pri kateri na površino lista nanesemo abrazivno sredstvo in sok okužene rastline, pri čemer pa je potrebno določiti dejavnike, ki so ključni za ponovljivost tega postopka. V raziskavi smo pokazali, da se je višji titer virusa v inokulumu odražal v hitrejšem dvigu titra RNA PVYNTN v inokuliranih listih ter v hitrejšem širjenju PVYNTN iz inukuliranih listov v zgornje neinokulirane liste. Končni titer RNA PVYNTN v zgornjih neinokuliranih listih pa ni bil odvisen od titra virusa v inokulumu. Poleg tega smo opazili tudi, da je bila hitrost pojava bolezenskih znamenj odvisna od titra virusa v inokulumu. Novak et al.: The Titre of the Virus in the Inoculum Affects ...