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Publication no. P-2001-1205-01R
Virology
The Use of Green Fluorescent Protein-Tagged Recombinant Viruses to Test Lettuce
mosaic virus Resistance in Lettuce. T. Candresse, O. Le Gall, B.
Maisonneuve, S. German-Retana, and E. Redondo. First, second, fourth, and fifth
authors: Equipe de Virologie, UMR GD2P, IBVM, Centre INRA de Bordeaux, BP81,
33883 Villenave d’Ornon cedex, France; and third author: Unité de Génétique
et d’Amélioration des Fruits et Légumes, INRA, Domaine Saint Maurice, BP94,
84143 Montfavet cedex, France. Phytopathology 92:169-176. Accepted for
publication 4 October 2001. Copyright 2002 The American Phytopathological
Society.
Seed certification and the use of cultivars containing one of two, probably
allelic, recessive genes, mo1(^1) and mo1(^2),
are the principal control methods for Lettuce mosaic virus (LMV) in
lettuce. Although for a few LMV isolates, mo1(^2) confers
resistance with most isolates, the genes mo1(^1) or mo1(^2)
confer a tolerance, and virus accumulation is readily detected in mo1-carrying
plants. This phenotype complicates evaluation of the resistance status, in
particular for mo1(^1), for which there are no viral strains
against which a true resistance is expressed. Two green fluorescent protein
(GFP)-tagged viruses were constructed, derived from a non-resistance breaking
isolate (LMV-0) and from a resistance-breaking isolate (LMV-E). An evaluation of
101 cultivars of known status was carried out with these recombinant viruses.
Using the LMV-0-derived recombinant, identification of mo1-carrying
cultivars was simple because, contrary to its wild-type parent, systemic
movement of LMV-0-GFP was abolished in resistant plants. This assay detected
four cases of misidentification of resistance status. In all these cases,
further tests confirmed that the prior resistance status information was
incorrect, so that a 100% correlation was observed between LMV-0-GFP behavior
and the mo1 resistance status. Similarly, the LMV-E-derived recombinant
allowed the identification of mo1(^2) lettuce lines because its
systemic movement was restricted in mo1(^2) lines but not in
susceptible or in mo1(^1) lines. The tagged viruses were able to
systemically invade another host, pea, irrespective of its resistance status
against another member of the genus Potyvirus, Pea seed-borne mosaic
virus. The use of these recombinant viruses could therefore greatly
facilitate LMV resistance evaluation and speed up lettuce breeding programs.

Figure 1 is in color online.
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