The detection of plum pox virus in Prunus species by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) |
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Authors: | A. N. ADAMS |
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Affiliation: | East Mailing Research Station, Maidstone, Kent, ME19 6BJ |
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Abstract: | Plum pox virus (PPV) was detected by ELISA throughout the year in extracts of root, bark, fruit, flowers and leaves of Prunus species; extracts from healthy plants gave negligible background reactions. In the summer, ELISA values obtained with extracts from infected leaves were variable but samples extracted at 1:50 (w/v) could have been diluted a further five to 110 times before reaching the limit of detection. Using a single antiserum the virus was detected in several hundred trees, suggesting that there was little antigenic variation. PPV was unevenly distributed in leaves and shoots and commonly occurred in only a few branches of an infected tree although it was frequently present in suckers growing from the roots. Virus was detected in the only three trees known to be infected in random leaf samples taken from 530 1-yr-old trees, but some infected trees were missed in samples taken from older trees and from a 7-yr-old rootstock hedge. The main practical use of ELISA for PPV is therefore as a sensitive and highly reliable confirmatory test which greatly facilitates control of the disease by the prompt destruction of infected trees. |
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