Research in Plant Disease (Dec 2015)

Detection of Soybean mosaic virus by Reverse Transcription Loop-mediated Isothermal Amplification

  • Yeong-Hoon Lee,
  • Bong-Sub Kim,
  • Young-Nam Yoon,
  • Soon-Do Bae,
  • Hyun-Joo Kim,
  • Bishwo P. Mainali,
  • In-Hee Park,
  • Su-Heon Lee,
  • Hang-Won Kang,
  • Dae-Hyeon Bae2

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5423/RPD.2015.21.4.315
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 4
pp. 315 – 320

Abstract

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Soybean mosaic virus (SMV) is a prevalent pathogen that causes significant yield reduction in soybean production worldwide. SMV belongs to potyvirus and causes typical symptoms such as mild mosaic, mosaic and necrosis. SMV is seed-borne and also transmitted by aphid. Eleven SMV strains, G1 to G7, G5H, G6H, G7H, and G7a were reported in soybean varieties in Korea. A reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) method allowed one-step detection of gene amplification by simple procedure and needed only a simple incubator for isothermal template. This RT-LAMP method allowed direct detection of RNA from virus-infected plants without thermal cycling and gel electrophoresis. In this study, we designed RT-LAMP primers named SML-F3/B3/FIP/BIP from coat protein gene sequence of SMV. After the reaction of RT-LAMP, products were identified by electrophoresis and with the detective fluorescent dye, SYBR Green I under daylight and UV light. Optimal reaction condition was at 58°C for 60 min and the primers of RT-LAMP showed the specificity for nine SMV strains tested in this study.

Keywords