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The Potential Use of Isothermal Amplification Assays for In-Field Diagnostics of Plant Pathogens

Rapid, sensitive, and timely diagnostics are essential for protecting plants from pathogens. Commonly, PCR techniques are used in laboratories for highly sensitive detection of DNA/RNA from viral, viroid, bacterial, and fungal pathogens of plants. However, using PCR-based methods for in-field diagno...

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Published in:Plants (Basel) 2021-11, Vol.10 (11), p.2424
Main Authors: Ivanov, Aleksandr V., Safenkova, Irina V., Zherdev, Anatoly V., Dzantiev, Boris B.
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description Rapid, sensitive, and timely diagnostics are essential for protecting plants from pathogens. Commonly, PCR techniques are used in laboratories for highly sensitive detection of DNA/RNA from viral, viroid, bacterial, and fungal pathogens of plants. However, using PCR-based methods for in-field diagnostics is a challenge and sometimes nearly impossible. With the advent of isothermal amplification methods, which provide amplification of nucleic acids at a certain temperature and do not require thermocyclic equipment, going beyond the laboratory has become a reality for molecular diagnostics. The amplification stage ceases to be limited by time and instruments. Challenges to solve involve finding suitable approaches for rapid and user-friendly plant preparation and detection of amplicons after amplification. Here, we summarize approaches for in-field diagnostics of phytopathogens based on different types of isothermal amplification and discuss their advantages and disadvantages. In this review, we consider a combination of isothermal amplification methods with extraction and detection methods compatible with in-field phytodiagnostics. Molecular diagnostics in out-of-lab conditions are of particular importance for protecting against viral, bacterial, and fungal phytopathogens in order to quickly prevent and control the spread of disease. We believe that the development of rapid, sensitive, and equipment-free nucleic acid detection methods is the future of phytodiagnostics, and its benefits are already visible.
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subjects Acids
Agricultural production
Antigens
Cellulose
Disease control
DNA amplicon detection
Farms
Fungi
Genomes
Homogenization
Infections
isothermal amplification
Laboratories
Methods
molecular diagnostics
Nucleic acids
out-of-lab diagnostics
Pathogens
Peptides
Plant diseases
Polymerase chain reaction
recombinase polymerase amplification
Review
Temperature requirements
title The Potential Use of Isothermal Amplification Assays for In-Field Diagnostics of Plant Pathogens
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