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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Fort Pierce, Florida » U.S. Horticultural Research Laboratory » Subtropical Plant Pathology Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #298387

Title: Importance of Rootstock and Scion Tomato Mosaic Virus Resistance for Grafting Heirloom Tomatoes

Author
item Rosskopf, Erin
item KUBOTA, CHIERI - University Of Arizona
item Adkins, Scott
item Burelle, Nancy
item Hong, Jason

Submitted to: Proceedings of International Research Conference on Methyl Bromide Alternatives
Publication Type: Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: 9/15/2013
Publication Date: N/A
Citation: N/A

Interpretive Summary: Many tomato growers produce specialty tomatoes that are referred to as ‘heirlooms’. These are typically varieties that are open-pollinated and indeterminate in their growth habit. These varieties are also susceptible to disease. It is desirable to graft heirloom tomatoes to commercial tomato rootstocks that have been specifically bred for disease resistance. This can be advantageous to organic growers or growers who do not want to fumigate soil for disease control. In an experiment evaluating grafted tomatoes, plants that had Tomato mosaic virus (ToMV)-susceptible scions (the heirloom) grafted onto ToMV-resistant rootstocks exhibited rapid necrosis that is atypical of virus infection. A fungal plant pathogen was isolated from only one of ten wilted plants. A survey of the literature uncovered a report from the 1970s indicating that there could be an incompatibility between rootstocks and scions with differing levels of resistance to ToMV. To determine if this phenomenon would explain the wilting that was observed in the field, a ToMV-susceptible heirloom scion was grafted to a highly resistant rootstock. These plants were inoculated with ToMV and they wilted within one week of inoculation.

Technical Abstract: During the 2011-2012 tomato production season at a Florida organic farm, heirloom tomato scions grafted onto Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV)-resistant tomato rootstocks were observed to undergo a rapid and severe wilt, and ultimately die. The soilborne fungus, Sclerotium rolfsii, was isolated from one plant, but no additional fungi or bacteria were isolated from any of the other wilted plants occurring in two of three grafted varieties. Tomato mosaic virus (ToMV) was detected in many plants, in both research plots and commercial production areas. These on-farm trials were conducted to evaluate heirloom tomatoes used as scions grafted to the commercial cultivar 'Tygress' (T) and to the small-fruited tomato variety 'Matt's Wild Cherry.' These were selected as experimental rootstocks due to their reported resistance to TYLCV. Heirloom tomato variety scions evaluated were ‘Purple Calabash,’ ‘Black Prince’ (BP), and ‘Moskvich.’ These heirloom varieties are highly susceptible to TYLCV and early-season infection with this virus can completely eliminate crop yields. All three heirloom varieties were grafted onto each of the rootstocks. Only BP grafted onto T wilted in the field study. In an early grafting experiment, it was reported that plant necrosis resulted from ToMV infection when rootstock and scion did not have the same tobamovirus resistance genes. During the 1970s, this was widely reported in the Japanese. The phenomenon has not been of significant concern in grafting standard, open-field US commercial tomato varieties as most, if not all are highly resistant hybrids, being homozygous resistant (Tm-2a/Tm-2a). The problem has arisen when ToMV-resistant rootstocks (Tm-2/Tm-2 and Tm-2a/Tm-2a) are grafted with susceptible (Tm-1 or tm) scions. A series of greenhouse experiments were conducted to test the hypothesis of wilt occurring from infection of “incompatible levels of resistance.” BP and T were reciprocally grafted using each variety as both the scion and the rootstock, and were inoculated with ToMV. Control plants were mock inoculated and produced no symptoms. Plants that were grafted with T as the scion and BP as the rootstock (T/BP) developed a foliar mosaic, whereas BP/T plants wilted within one week of inoculation. Non-grafted T plants exhibited no symptoms, while BP non-grafted and BP/BP exhibited mottle. Plants were sampled and tested for ToMV by ELISA at the root, the stem below the graft, the stem above the graft, the middle of the plant, and at 15 and 5cm from the apex. Sample location was not significant (p=0.735) and there was no interaction between treatment (graft combination) and sample location. The greatest ELISA absorbance was recorded in the non-grafted BP and BP/BP, followed by T/BP and non-grafted T. Grafting BP onto Cheong Gang (CG), a TYLCV-resistant hybrid rootstock, resulted in the same wilt observed when grafting BP/T. Allele-specific PCR detected homozygous Tm-2 ToMV resistance genes to ToMV strains in T and CG; all heirloom tomatoes tested were found to lack any ToMV resistance genes. As grafting becomes more commonly used in the US, particularly for the niche market of heirloom tomatoes, it will become increasingly more important for information on ToMV resistance to be developed and made available to transplant producers.