Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) is a begomovirus (genus Begomovirus, family Geminiviridae) transmitted persistently by the whitefly Bemisia tabaci. It causes tomato yellow leaf curl disease (TYLCD), resulting in significant yield losses worldwide. TYLCD is controlled mainly by using F1 hybrid tomato cultivars harboring the TYLCV resistance gene Ty-1. However, infected Ty-1-bearing tomato plants accumulate viral DNA, which may eventually lead to the emergence of a resistance-breaking TYLCV variant. Recently, a B. tabaci-resistant tomato line derived from the introgression of type IV leaf glandular trichomes and acylsucrose secretion from wild tomato (Solanum pimpinellifolium) was shown to effectively control the spread of TYLCV. In this study, we combined B. tabaci resistance and Ty-1-based TYLCV resistance to increase the robustness and durability of the TYLCD resistance mediated by Ty-1 in tomato plants. Specifically, we characterized and used a Group 2-like isolate of the Israel strain of TYLCV (TYLCV-IL-G2) that contributes to TYLCD epidemics in southeastern Spain. A comparison with isolates of the previously identified TYLCV variant revealed TYLCV-IL-G2 has a similar host range, but it induces a slightly more severe TYLCD in Ty-1-bearing tomato plants. Moreover, we demonstrated that acylsucrose-producing B. tabaci-resistant tomato plants can limit the spread of TYLCV-IL-G2 better than a near-isogenic line lacking type IV trichomes and unable to secrete acylsucrose. Pyramiding Ty-1-based TYLCV resistance and B. tabaci resistance provided by type IV glandular trichomes helped to decrease the effects of TYLCV on Ty-1-bearing tomato plants as well as the likelihood of TYLCV evolution in infected plants.
Keywords: Acylsucrose; Begomovirus; Geminivirus; Ty-1 resistance gene; glandular trichome; tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV); whitefly resistance.