4.4 Article

Development of singleplex and multiplex real-time (Taqman®) RT-PCR assays for the detection of viruses associated with fig mosaic disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGICAL METHODS
Volume 293, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jviromet.2021.114145

Keywords

Fig; Viruses; Detection; RT-PCR; Real-time RT-PCR; TaqMan (R)

Funding

  1. National Council for Scientific Research of Lebanon (CNRS-L)
  2. Lebanese University

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Singleplex and multiplex real-time RT-PCR assays were developed to detect seven fig-infecting viruses, and a large-scale survey in Egypt showed a high prevalence of mixed infections, with FMV being the most commonly observed virus.
Singleplex and multiplex real-time (TaqMan (R)) RT-PCR assays were developed to detect seven fig-infecting viruses, i.e., fig leaf mottle-associated virus 1 (FLMaV-1), fig leaf mottle-associated virus 2 (FLMaV-2), fig mild mottle-associated virus (FMMaV), fig mosaic virus (FMV), fig latent virus 1 (FLV-1), fig cryptic virus 1 (FCV-1) and fig fleck-associated virus (FFkaV). The sensitivity of the newly developed TaqMan (R) assays was compared with the corresponding conventional RT-PCR (RT-PCR) using 10. to 10 6 serial dilutions of both cDNA and crude fig extracts. The results showed that the Taqman (R) RT-PCR assays were generally 102 to 103-fold more sensitive than the RT-PCR assays, except in the case of FLV-1 detection, where the two techniques had the same sensitivity. In the multiplex Taqman (R) RT-PCR, only a maximum of five viruses could be detected simultaneously in naturally infected fig trees, regardless of which combination of the virus-specific probes and primers were used. Both the RT-PCR and Taqman (R) RT-PCR assays were used in a large-scale survey of 100 field-grown fig trees in Egypt. The results showed the presence of all seven viruses under study, mostly occurring as mixed infections (63 %). The prevalence of infections observed in the tested samples were as follows: FMV (62 %), FFkaV (59 %), FLMaV-2 (32 %), FLV-1 (16 %), FLMaV-1 (14 %), FCV-1 (7 %) and FMMaV (4 %). FMV was invariably associated with diseased trees that presented mosaic-like symptoms. In the few cases where the mosaic-affected trees were found to be free of FMV, they were found to be infected with a mixture of two or more other viruses.

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