Abstract

Some diseases manifest as one characteristic set of symptoms to the host, but can be caused by multiple pathogens. Control treatments based on plant symptoms can make it difficult to effectively manage such diseases, as the biology of the underlying pathogens can vary. Grapevine leafroll disease affects grapes worldwide, and is associated with several viral species in the family Closteroviridae. Whereas some of the viruses associated with this disease are transmitted by insect vectors, others are only graft-transmissible. In three regions of California, we surveyed vineyards containing diseased vines and screened symptomatic plants for all known viral species associated with grapevine leafroll disease. Relative incidence of each virus species differed among the three regions regions, particularly in relation to species with known vectors compared with those only known to be graft-transmitted. In one region, the pathogen population was dominated by species not known to have an insect vector. In contrast, populations in the other surveyed regions were dominated by virus species that are vector-transmissible. Our survey did not detect viruses associated with grapevine leafroll disease at some sites with characteristic disease symptoms. This could be explained either by undescribed genetic diversity among these viruses that prevented detection with available molecular tools at the time the survey was performed, or a misidentification of visual symptoms that may have had other underlying causes. Based on the differences in relative prevalence of each virus species among regions and among vineyards within regions, we expect that region and site-specific management strategies are needed for effective disease control.

Highlights

  • The control and management of diseases is predicated on the accurate identification of their etiology

  • This is highlighted in this study and our previous study [15], as each of two primer pairs that we used differed in their ability to detect genetically distinct variants of Grapevine leafroll-associated virus 3 (GLRaV-3)

  • It is possible that plants were infected with viruses other than GLRaVs, which may cause disease symptoms similar to Grapevine leafroll disease (GLD), such as the newly reported Grapevine red blotch-associated virus [26,27]

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Summary

Introduction

The control and management of diseases is predicated on the accurate identification of their etiology. There are examples of diseases caused by pathogen complexes; in some cases a set of multiple factors is required for disease symptom expression, while in other examples infection by one member of a group of related pathogens may lead to similar disease symptoms [1,2] In the latter scenario, site- or regionspecific identification of pathogens associated with disease symptoms is important, as each pathogen may have distinct biological traits and requires a different strategy to limit its impact and spread. It should be noted that recent studies have collapsed several virus species associated with GLRaV-4 into GLRaV-4LV (LV standing for ‘like viruses’), due to the lack of substantial genetic differences among those species [3] These viruses are associated with GLD and can be spread by insect vectors as well as contaminated plant material. Current knowledge regarding the biological role of these viruses in GLD is primarily derived from correlational evidence based on surveys and experimental inoculations by grafting infected wood or manipulating insect vectors

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