Vol. 59 No. 1 (2020)
Short Notes

The Detection of viruses in olive cultivars in Greece, using a rapid and effective RNA extraction method, for certification of virus-tested propagation material

Matthaios M. MATHIOUDAKIS
Institute of Olive Tree, Subtropical Crops and Viticulture, Plant Pathology Laboratory, Karamanlis Ave. 167, Gr-73134, Chania
Maria SAPONARI
Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche-Istituto per la Protezione Sostenibile delle Piante (CNR-IPSP), Sede Secondaria di Bari, 70126, Bari, Italy
Beata HASIÓW-JAROSZEWSKA
Institute of Plant Protection-National Research Institute, Department of Virology and Bacteriology, ul. Wł. Węgorka 20, 60-318, Poznań, Poland
Toufic ELBEAINO
Istituto Agronomico Mediterraneo di Bari, Via Ceglie 9, Valenzano, 70010, Bari, Italy
Georgios KOUBOURIS
Institute of Olive Tree, Subtropical Crops and Viticulture, Laboratory for Olive Cultivation, Karamanlis Ave. 167, Gr-73134, Chania

Published 2020-03-14

Keywords

  • Olive viruses,
  • RT-PCR,
  • olive RNA extraction protocol,
  • virus-tested propagation material

How to Cite

[1]
M. . M. MATHIOUDAKIS, M. . SAPONARI, B. . HASIÓW-JAROSZEWSKA, T. . ELBEAINO, and G. KOUBOURIS, “The Detection of viruses in olive cultivars in Greece, using a rapid and effective RNA extraction method, for certification of virus-tested propagation material”, Phytopathol. Mediterr., vol. 59, no. 1, pp. 203–211, Mar. 2020.

Abstract

Although Greece is the world’s third largest olive production country, information about the presence of olive viruses is limited. A survey for the presence of virus infections in the ten most important Greek cultivars was conducted in a germplasm collection olive grove located in Chania, Crete. Samples were RT-PCR assayed for the presence of Arabis mosaic virus (ArMV), Cherry leafroll virus (CLRV), Strawberry latent ring spot virus (SLRSV), and Olive leaf yellowing-associated virus (OLYaV), amplifying part of the capsid protein (ArMV), the 3΄UTR (CLSRV, SLRSV) or the HSP70h (OLYaV) gene. Total RNAs were purified using the Trizol method, yielding good quality and purity, thereby confirming application of the method as a rapid economic extraction protocol for detection of olive viruses. SLRSV was the most predominant virus, with an infection rate of 55%, followed by CLRV and OLYaV in 5% of the tested samples. ArMV was detected only in one sample. Mixed virus infections were also commonly detected. The DNA amplicons of the obtained viruses from the infected samples were sequenced. The partial sequences of ArMV, CLRV and SLRSV from olives, which are reported for the first time, showed 74-100% nucleotide similarity with available homologous sequences from other crops, whereas OLYaV isolates showed high sequence variability of 25%. The phylogenetic analysis based on olive-OLYaV HSP70h partial-nucleotide sequences grouped the olive isolate sequences according to the geographical origins of the host germplasm collection. This is the first official report of the occurrence of olive viruses in Greece, emphasizing the need to implement a certification programme for production and distribution of high-quality (virus-free) olive propagation material, in Greece and more generally in the Mediterranean basin.

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