Application of FTA technology for sampling, recovery and molecular characterization of viral pathogens and virus-derived transgenes from plant tissues

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Plant viral diseases present major constraints to crop production. Effective sampling of the viruses infecting plants is required to facilitate their molecular study and is essential for the development of crop protection and improve...

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Main Authors: Aveling Terry, Legg James P, Aly Haytham, Yadav Jitender, Taylor Nigel J, Ndunguru Joseph, Thompson Graham, Fauquet Claude M
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2005-05-01
Series:Virology Journal
Online Access:http://www.virologyj.com/content/2/1/45
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spelling doaj-1b13161683f74b998b6076ab6536cc0c2020-11-24T22:00:05ZengBMCVirology Journal1743-422X2005-05-01214510.1186/1743-422X-2-45Application of FTA technology for sampling, recovery and molecular characterization of viral pathogens and virus-derived transgenes from plant tissuesAveling TerryLegg James PAly HaythamYadav JitenderTaylor Nigel JNdunguru JosephThompson GrahamFauquet Claude M<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Plant viral diseases present major constraints to crop production. Effective sampling of the viruses infecting plants is required to facilitate their molecular study and is essential for the development of crop protection and improvement programs. Retaining integrity of viral pathogens within sampled plant tissues is often a limiting factor in this process, most especially when sample sizes are large and when operating in developing counties and regions remote from laboratory facilities. FTA is a paper-based system designed to fix and store nucleic acids directly from fresh tissues pressed into the treated paper. We report here the use of FTA as an effective technology for sampling and retrieval of DNA and RNA viruses from plant tissues and their subsequent molecular analysis.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>DNA and RNA viruses were successfully recovered from leaf tissues of maize, cassava, tomato and tobacco pressed into FTA<sup>® </sup>Classic Cards. Viral nucleic acids eluted from FTA cards were found to be suitable for diagnostic molecular analysis by PCR-based techniques and restriction analysis, and for cloning and nucleotide sequencing in a manner equivalent to that offered by tradition isolation methods. Efficacy of the technology was demonstrated both from sampled greenhouse-grown plants and from leaf presses taken from crop plants growing in farmer's fields in East Africa. In addition, FTA technology was shown to be suitable for recovery of viral-derived transgene sequences integrated into the plant genome.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Results demonstrate that FTA is a practical, economical and sensitive method for sampling, storage and retrieval of viral pathogens and plant genomic sequences, when working under controlled conditions and in the field. Application of this technology has the potential to significantly increase ability to bring modern analytical techniques to bear on the viral pathogens infecting crop plants.</p> http://www.virologyj.com/content/2/1/45
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aveling Terry
Legg James P
Aly Haytham
Yadav Jitender
Taylor Nigel J
Ndunguru Joseph
Thompson Graham
Fauquet Claude M
spellingShingle Aveling Terry
Legg James P
Aly Haytham
Yadav Jitender
Taylor Nigel J
Ndunguru Joseph
Thompson Graham
Fauquet Claude M
Application of FTA technology for sampling, recovery and molecular characterization of viral pathogens and virus-derived transgenes from plant tissues
Virology Journal
author_facet Aveling Terry
Legg James P
Aly Haytham
Yadav Jitender
Taylor Nigel J
Ndunguru Joseph
Thompson Graham
Fauquet Claude M
author_sort Aveling Terry
title Application of FTA technology for sampling, recovery and molecular characterization of viral pathogens and virus-derived transgenes from plant tissues
title_short Application of FTA technology for sampling, recovery and molecular characterization of viral pathogens and virus-derived transgenes from plant tissues
title_full Application of FTA technology for sampling, recovery and molecular characterization of viral pathogens and virus-derived transgenes from plant tissues
title_fullStr Application of FTA technology for sampling, recovery and molecular characterization of viral pathogens and virus-derived transgenes from plant tissues
title_full_unstemmed Application of FTA technology for sampling, recovery and molecular characterization of viral pathogens and virus-derived transgenes from plant tissues
title_sort application of fta technology for sampling, recovery and molecular characterization of viral pathogens and virus-derived transgenes from plant tissues
publisher BMC
series Virology Journal
issn 1743-422X
publishDate 2005-05-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Plant viral diseases present major constraints to crop production. Effective sampling of the viruses infecting plants is required to facilitate their molecular study and is essential for the development of crop protection and improvement programs. Retaining integrity of viral pathogens within sampled plant tissues is often a limiting factor in this process, most especially when sample sizes are large and when operating in developing counties and regions remote from laboratory facilities. FTA is a paper-based system designed to fix and store nucleic acids directly from fresh tissues pressed into the treated paper. We report here the use of FTA as an effective technology for sampling and retrieval of DNA and RNA viruses from plant tissues and their subsequent molecular analysis.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>DNA and RNA viruses were successfully recovered from leaf tissues of maize, cassava, tomato and tobacco pressed into FTA<sup>® </sup>Classic Cards. Viral nucleic acids eluted from FTA cards were found to be suitable for diagnostic molecular analysis by PCR-based techniques and restriction analysis, and for cloning and nucleotide sequencing in a manner equivalent to that offered by tradition isolation methods. Efficacy of the technology was demonstrated both from sampled greenhouse-grown plants and from leaf presses taken from crop plants growing in farmer's fields in East Africa. In addition, FTA technology was shown to be suitable for recovery of viral-derived transgene sequences integrated into the plant genome.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Results demonstrate that FTA is a practical, economical and sensitive method for sampling, storage and retrieval of viral pathogens and plant genomic sequences, when working under controlled conditions and in the field. Application of this technology has the potential to significantly increase ability to bring modern analytical techniques to bear on the viral pathogens infecting crop plants.</p>
url http://www.virologyj.com/content/2/1/45
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