© Benaki Phytopathological Institute
Pepino mosaic virus
53
the tomato strain in commercial tomato
crops.
As a potexvirus, PepMV is easily mechani-

cally transmissible and remains infectious
for several weeks in plant debris or on
contaminated surfaces.
Tomato fruit harvested from infected

plants contain high concentrations of the
virus and as such, they can easily spread
the virus over long distances.
Due to the absence of explicit symp-
toms, the initial introduction of PepMV into
Europe in commercial tomato crops may,
thus, have remained largely unnoticed.
Nothing is known about the possible occur-
rence of the EU-tomato, Ch2 or US1 strains
in pepino or in wild and cultivated
Sola-
num
spp. in South America and the precise
origin of these strains remains unknown. It
has been suggested that the EU-tomato and
Ch2 isolates show an increased fitness and
virulence in commercial tomato crops. This
might explain the fast worldwide spread of
the virus problem.
Although PepMV was already present in
Spain since 2000, the Ch2 strain has spread
quickly over Europe after 2005. No obvious
reasons for this have been identified. It is
also not clear if this strain is more compet-
itive than the EU-tomato strain. Both strains
often occur in mixed infections and genet-
ic recombinants between the EU-tomato
and Ch2 strain have been identified both in
Spain (Pagán
et al.,
2006) and Belgium (Han-
ssen
et al.,
2008). It is not known to what
extent these mixed infections and recom-
bination events have contributed or will
contribute to the severity of the virus symp-
toms or to the spread of the virus problem.
Seed transmission has been implicat-
ed in the spread of the virus. The introduc-
tion through infected seed of such a high-
ly contagious virus in only a few plants in a
nursery can obviously result in the infection
of many thousands of plants in a very short
time. For this reason, PepMV has a quaran-
tine status on tomato seeds in the Europe-
an Union. Directive 2004/200/EC prohib-
its the trade of seeds collected from PepMV
infected plants or from plants not officially
tested for the absence of PepMV. Recently, a
study on the possibility of seed transmission
of PepMV was conducted within the frame-
work of the EC FP6 funded research project
PEPEIRA (
‘Pepino mosaic virus: epidemiology,
economic impact and pest risk analysis’
; www.
pepeira.wur.nl). In this study, 100,000 seeds
were harvested from an infected crop. Fol-
lowing only marginal cleaning without any
disinfection, the seeds were sown and the
seedlings were tested for PepMV infection
by DAS-ELISA. Of nearly 9,000 tested batch-
es of 10 seedlings each, only 23 were positive
(Hanssen
et al
., in press). This corresponds to
a seed transmission rate of 0.026%, which is
in good agreement with earlier tests (Krin-
kels, 2001; Córdoba-Sellés
et al
., 2007).
Virus damage and control
Initially PepMV infections in commercial to-
mato crops were reported as relatively in-
significant with no apparent plant or fruit
symptoms and no or very limited yield re-
duction. Studies from the UK, however, re-
ported significant effects on fruit quality
(Spence
et al.,
2006). Smaller sized fruit with
different grades of uneven ripening and dis-
coloration and occasionally misshaped fruit
due to PepMV infection led to production of
fruit unsuited for the fresh UK market and
hence to economic damage.
Studies indicate that symptom induc-
tion by PepMV is highly dependent on en-
vironmental conditions. In Spain, PepMV-
infected tomato plants showed symptoms
only from autumn through spring and
symptoms disappeared in late spring when
higher temperatures occurred. Similar ef-
fects of high temperatures and high light
conditions have been reported from oth-
er countries. However, symptoms on Pep-
MV-infected plants can be highly variable,
ranging from very mild leaf symptoms to se-
vere leaf and stem necrosis and fruit symp-
toms. Mild, chlorotic or necrotic PepMV iso-
lates from both the EU-tomato and the Ch2
strains have been reported. This suggests
that the capacity of the virus to induce dif-
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