scholarly journals Autophagy Inhibits Intercellular Transport of Citrus Leaf Blotch Virus by Targeting Viral Movement Protein

Viruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 2189
Author(s):  
Erbo Niu ◽  
Huan Liu ◽  
Hongsheng Zhou ◽  
Lian Luo ◽  
Yunfeng Wu ◽  
...  

Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved cellular-degradation mechanism implicated in antiviral defense in plants. Studies have shown that autophagy suppresses virus accumulation in cells; however, it has not been reported to specifically inhibit viral spread in plants. This study demonstrated that infection with citrus leaf blotch virus (CLBV; genus Citrivirus, family Betaflexiviridae) activated autophagy in Nicotiana benthamiana plants as indicated by the increase of autophagosome formation. Impairment of autophagy through silencing of N. benthamiana autophagy-related gene 5 (NbATG5) and NbATG7 enhanced cell-to-cell and systemic movement of CLBV; however, it did not affect CLBV accumulation when the systemic infection had been fully established. Treatment using an autophagy inhibitor or silencing of NbATG5 and NbATG7 revealed that transiently expressed movement protein (MP), but not coat protein, of CLBV was targeted by selective autophagy for degradation. Moreover, we identified that CLBV MP directly interacted with NbATG8C1 and NbATG8i, the isoforms of autophagy-related protein 8 (ATG8), which are key factors that usually bind cargo receptors for selective autophagy. Our results present a novel example in which autophagy specifically targets a viral MP to limit the intercellular spread of the virus in plants.

Virus Genes ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 131-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Águeda Renovell ◽  
Mari Carmen Vives ◽  
Susana Ruiz-Ruiz ◽  
Luis Navarro ◽  
Pedro Moreno ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (10) ◽  
pp. 1326-1337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesús Agüero ◽  
Susana Ruiz-Ruiz ◽  
María del Carmen Vives ◽  
Karelia Velázquez ◽  
Luis Navarro ◽  
...  

Viral vectors have been used to express foreign proteins in plants or to silence endogenous genes. This methodology could be appropriate for citrus plants that have long juvenile periods and adult plants that are difficult to transform. We developed viral vectors based on Citrus leaf blotch virus (CLBV) by duplicating a minimum promoter (92 bp) either at the 3′ untranslated region (clbv3′pr vector) or at the intergenic region between the movement and coat protein (CP) genes (clbvINpr vector). The duplicated fragment (–42/+50) around the transcription start site of the CP subgenomic RNA (sgRNA) had the full promoter activity and induced synthesis of a new sgRNA in infected plants. Agroinoculation with these vectors resulted in systemic infection of Nicotiana benthamiana and the resulting virions systemically infected citrus plants. A clbvINpr vector carrying the green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene expressed GFP in citrus plants and triggered gfp silencing in gfp-transgenic citrus plants, and vectors carrying fragments of the phytoene desaturase or the magnesium chelatase genes incited a silencing phenotype in citrus plants. These silenced phenotypes persisted in successive flushes. Because CLBV infections are symptomless in most citrus species, the effective silencing induced by CLBV-derived vectors will be helpful to analyze citrus gene function.


Author(s):  
M. C. Vives ◽  
J. A. Pina ◽  
J. Juárez ◽  
L. Navarro ◽  
P. Moreno ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiyou Xuan ◽  
Jiaxi Xie ◽  
Haodong Yu ◽  
Song Zhang ◽  
Ruhui Li ◽  
...  

Mulberries (Morus spp., family Moraceae) are economically important deciduous woody plants. Their leaves are food for silkworms, and both the fruits and leaves have nutritional and medicinal values (Qin et al. 2012). The plants are widely distributed globally and have been cultivated in China for more than 5,000 years (Xie et al. 2014). In April 2019, virus-like symptoms of chlorotic leaf spots and, occasionally witches’ broom were observed in trees of white mulberry (M. alba) in Shapingba district of Chongqing province. To investigate if any potential viral agent is associated with the symptoms, total RNA was extracted from leaves of one symptomatic tree using an RNAprep Pure Plant Plus Kit (TianGen, China). Ribosomal RNAs were depleted using a TruSeq RNA Sample Prep Kit (Illumina, USA), and the depleted RNA was used for construction of a cDNA library for sequencing using an Illumina HiSeq X-ten platform with pair-ended reads length layout 150 bp. Adaptors, low-quality reads and mulberry genomes-derived reads (He et al. 2013) were removed from a total of 25,433,798 reads using the CLC Genomics Workbench 11 (Qiagen, USA) and the clean reads of 936,562 were subjected to de novo assembly that generated 4,278 contigs (200-3,862 bp). These sequences were annotated by Blastx searches to local Viruses_NR and viroid datasets downloaded from GenBank. Finally, except three contigs (3,862 nt, 1,950 nt, and 1,179 nt) with 81.4–90% nucleotide sequence identities to citrus leaf blotch virus (CLBV, genus Citrivirus, family Betaflexiviridae), no other contigs were identified as viral-related. Total clean reads of 113,185 were mapped to the viral contigs with average coverage depth of 1,915, suggesting the presence of CLBV in the symptomatic tree. To recover the complete genome of CLBV, overlapping fragments were amplified by RT-PCR using virus-specific primer pairs. The 5’ and 3’ termini were determined by rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE kit, Invitrogen, USA). Five clones per amplicon were sequenced in two directions (Cao et al. 2018). The complete genome of the mulberry strain of CLBV (CLBV-ML, GenBank accession no. MT767171) is 8,776 nucleotides (nt) in length, excluding the poly (A) tail. CLBV-ML is similar to extant CLBV isolates in genome structure. BLASTn analysis showed that CLBV-ML had highest nucleotide sequence identities of 79.65-81.56% with Actinidia isolates (Liu et al. 2019) of CLBV at the whole genome. Phylogenetic analysis also placed it with the Actinidia isolates, indicating they are closely related. Thus, CLBV-ML is a highly divergent strain of CLBV. To study the occurrence of CLBV-ML, a total of 62 mulberry samples (42 with similar symptoms and 20 without symptoms) were randomly collected from Shapingba and tested by conventional RT-PCR using an isolate-specific primer pair (CLBV-F7182: ACCAATGACAATGCCACA; CLBV-R7857: TTATGAAACTCTTCCCACTT) designed in the CP gene to amplify a 676 bp fragment. The virus was detected in 37 symptomatic trees (88%) and 2 (10%) asymptomatic trees, suggesting the association of CLBV-ML with the symptoms. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of CLBV infection in mulberry which expands the host range of CBLV.


Virology ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 287 (1) ◽  
pp. 225-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.C. Vives ◽  
L. Galipienso ◽  
L. Navarro ◽  
P. Moreno ◽  
J. Guerri

Virology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 460-461 ◽  
pp. 154-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesus Agüero ◽  
María del Carmen Vives ◽  
Karelia Velázquez ◽  
José Antonio Pina ◽  
Luis Navarro ◽  
...  

Virology ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 406 (2) ◽  
pp. 360-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Águeda Renovell ◽  
Selma Gago ◽  
Susana Ruiz-Ruiz ◽  
Karelia Velázquez ◽  
Luis Navarro ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 100 (5) ◽  
pp. 1027-1027 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Wang ◽  
D. Zhu ◽  
Y. Tan ◽  
X. Zong ◽  
H. Wei ◽  
...  

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