Edmonton Journal

Tool helps detect canola disease

U of S develops quick new test that could save millions for at-risk crops

- FEDERICA GIANNELLI Federica Giannelli is a graduate student intern in the University of Saskatchew­an research profile and impact unit.

SASKATOON University of Saskatchew­an researcher­s have developed a new testing tool for faster, cheaper and easier detection of aster yellows, a leafhopper-borne disease that can devastate canola yields and farmers’ income.

“Our tool will help save precious time and resources for scientists, agronomist­s and producers,” said U of S biology PHD student Karolina Pusz-bochenska. “Farmers will be able to mitigate the potential damage to their crop yields. Our tool will help them understand whether they should spray pesticides right away to kill infected leafhopper insects.”

The canola season in Canada is short, and the disease spreads very fast, so understand­ing whether crops and insects are infected saves time and money. In 2012, the canola industry saw 80 per cent of fields infected and at least a $270-million loss.

The new testing can be done in the field in just one hour with accurate results. Regular lab tests can take from several days to two weeks, and are more expensive.

Aster yellows, caused by a bacteria-like organism, is carried by a variety of insects. It reaches Canada mainly through leafhopper­s moving from the southern United States in the spring. When leafhopper­s feed on infected crops they are unharmed, but they carry the organism in their bodies, ready to spread it to healthy plants, including vegetable crops, such as lettuce and carrots, when they feed again.

To detect whether leafhopper­s are infected, the U of S researcher­s extract and analyze DNA from the insects.

“It’s actually very simple. Farmers could even do the testing in the back of their trucks,” said Pusz-bochenska. “All you have to do is to crush a leafhopper on a special piece of paper and expose it to a certain temperatur­e.”

After 20 minutes, the researcher­s use a fabric puncher on the crushed insect to obtain a sample that can then be analyzed with a LAMP assay — a Dna-amplifying method that also can be adapted to the field. The analysis accurately reveals whether the insect is positive for aster yellows. The test also can also indicate whether plant tissues are infected.

The research team’s results, published in Plant Health Progress, show that in the case of aster yellows, the LAMP assay technique more accurately detects the disease and is more sensitive than the usual gold standard test for DNA lab analysis.

“The developmen­t of this novel and more sensitive test was driven by one of our molecular scientists, Tim Dumonceaux, in response to our need to rapidly identify whether individual aster leafhopper­s had aster yellows disease,” said Tyler Wist, Agricultur­e and Agri-food Canada researcher and Pusz-bochenska’s co-supervisor along with U of S biology professor Jack Gray.

“Now we can more accurately assess the risk of disease spread from those early arriving leafhopper­s and warn the agricultur­al community if there is a risk.”

The novel testing technique could also be used for detecting a variety of insect-borne plant diseases, such as Dutch elm disease. Current testing for beetles carrying the disease can take weeks, so the research team is collaborat­ing with the Saskatchew­an government to calibrate the new test for detecting the disease.

“Our testing technique may also apply to human and animal health, such as for testing ticks for Lyme disease or mosquitoes for Zika,” said Pusz-bochenska. “Now researcher­s at other universiti­es are even trying to adapt a similar technique for rapid COVID -19 testing of human blood samples.”

The next step is to use the new technique to establish an aster yellows risk index for canola in the summer. While farmers cannot directly access the test yet, the research team is in touch with companies in Canada interested in licensing the technology and offering the test.

The novel testing is the result of a collaborat­ion between AAFC scientists Wist, Tim Dumonceaux, and Chrystel Olivier and U of Sask researcher­s, including former post-doctoral fellow Edel Perez-lopez. The research is funded by AAFC.

 ?? TYLER WIST ?? University of Saskatchew­an PHD student Karolina Pusz-bochenska holds a canola plant — at risk for a leafhopper-borne disease.
TYLER WIST University of Saskatchew­an PHD student Karolina Pusz-bochenska holds a canola plant — at risk for a leafhopper-borne disease.

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