Earth & Environment - Posted by Jennifer Shike-Illinois on Monday, November 15, 2010 11:45 - 1 Comment    
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Is virus bad news for biomass?

Researchers have discovered a new virus that affects switchgrass, a potential bioenergy crop. The virus causes mosaic symptoms on the leaves and can reduce crop yields. It's not clear yet if the virus affects other crops. (Credit: University of Illinois)

U. ILLINOIS (US) — Researchers have confirmed reports of a new virus that affects switchgrass, a biomass crop being considered for commercial ethanol production.





The virus is associated with mosaic and yellow streak symptoms on switchgrass leaves, and has the potential of reducing photosynthesis and decreasing biomass yield. Details are reported in the Journal of Virological Methods.

“Viral diseases are potentially significant threats to bioenergy crops such as Miscanthus x giganteus, energycane, and switchgrass,” says Bright Agindotan, research associate at the University of Illinois.

Until recently, little has been known about viruses in these bioenergy crops. Agindotan says most plants can be infected with multiple viruses, making it a challenge to know which viruses to start screening for, especially when only a few viruses have been reported to affect these crops.

Agindotan developed a method that allows for the identification of a virus without prior knowledge of it. He successfully used sequence-independent amplification to identify RNA viruses. This is the first time it has been fully described and used for plant virus identification.

The method involves virus partial purification for a small amount of infected leaf tissue, extraction of viral RNA, random amplification, cloning, sequencing, and searching databases to identify the virus.

“Sequence-independent amplification has a distinct advantage over other virus characterization techniques in that it does not require specific reagents to target viruses,” he said. “This test will help us specifically identify uncharacterized viruses. In other words, you don’t have to know which virus you are looking for, exactly, to able to be able to identify the virus causing the problem.”

The identified virus in switchgrass is different, but related to the MRFV that has been reported to infect corn elsewhere, but has never been reported in Illinois. The Marafivirus was identified in switchgrass from a University of Illinois research field, where 20 to 30 percent of the plot was infected with this virus.

“We are still working on identifying the insects that are responsible for transmitting it,” he says. “We know that its MRFV relative is transmitted by leafhoppers in corn, but we are still trying to confirm the exact species that transmit this virus in switchgrass.”

At this time, researchers cannot confirm if this virus affects other crops. “We don’t yet know if the marafivirus in switchgrass evolved from the one that infects maize or vice versa,” he adds.

Developing biomass crops that do not harbor pathogens that can spread to nearby cultivated food crops such as cereals is a high priority for plant breeders. This discovery will help plant breeders develop resistant varieties, Agindotan says. The group will report the full genome sequence of the switchgrass virus soon.

More news from the University of Illinois: www.aces.uiuc.edu/news

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Jack Greene
May 3, 2011 12:20

That’s interesting…..I’m working on developing superbugs to intentionally carry viruses to Miscanthus x giganteus, energycane, Arundo Donas, switchgrass, pine plantations, and genetically-engineered eucalyptus, all intended for either cellulosic ethanol or for biomass burning.

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