cabbage leaf curl virus
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Steen Hoyer ◽  
Olivia W. Wilkins ◽  
Aanandi Munshi ◽  
Emma Wiese ◽  
Divya Dubey ◽  
...  

Cabbage leaf curl virus (CabLCV) has a bipartite single-stranded DNA genome and infects the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. CabLCV serves as a model for the genus Begomovirus, members of which cause tremendous crop losses worldwide. We have used CabLCV as a model for within-plant virus evolution by inoculating individual plants with infectious clones of both wild-type and mutagenized versions of the CabLCV genome. Consistent with previous reports, detrimental substitutions in the Replication-associated gene (Rep) were readily compensated for by direct reversion and/or alternative mutations. A surprising number of common mutations were detected elsewhere in both viral segments (DNA-A and DNA-B) indicating convergent evolution and suggesting that CabLCV may not be as well adapted to A. thaliana as commonly presumed. Consistent with this idea, a spontaneous coat protein variant consistently rose to higher allele frequency in a hypersusceptible A. thaliana accession (Sei-0) than in another susceptible accession (Col-0). Numerous high-frequency mutations were also detected in a candidate Rep binding site in DNA-B. Our results reinforce the fact that spontaneous mutation of this type of virus occurs rapidly and can change the majority consensus sequence of a within-plant virus population in weeks.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiliang Xiao ◽  
Miaomiao Xing ◽  
Xing Liu ◽  
Zhiyuan Fang ◽  
Limei Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS), a posttranscriptional gene silencing method, represents an effective technology for the analysis gene functions in plants. However, no VIGS vectors are available for Brassica oleracea till now. The gene silencing vectors TRV, pTYs and CaLCuV were chose to improve the VIGS system in cabbage, using phytoene desaturase (PDS) gene as an efficient visual indicator for VIGS.Results: We successfully silenced the expression of PDS and observed the photobleaching phenomenon in cabbage by pTYs and CaLCuV, with the latter displaying higher efficiency and lower cost. Then, the factors potentially affecting the silencing efficiency of VIGS by CaLCuV in cabbage, including targeting fragment strategy, inoculation method and incubation temperature, were compared. The optimized CaLCuV-based VIGS system is as follows: approximately 500 bp insert sequence, Agrobacterium OD600=1.0, vacuum osmosis method at the bud stage, and the incubation temperature of 22 °C, through which we achieved a stable silencing efficiency of 65%. To further test the effectiveness of the system, we selected two other genes in cabbage including Mg-chelataseH subunit (ChlH) and lobed-leaf 1 (LL1) to knock down their expression, and we observed the expected yellow or lobed leaves. In addition, we successfully applied the CaLCuV-based VIGS system in two other representative Brassica crops including B. rapa and B. nigra and thus expanded its application scope.Conclusion: These results demonstrate that CaLCuV-based VIGS effectively work in cabbage and can be used for analyzing gene function. Our VIGS system described here will contribute to efficient functional genomics research in Brassica crops.


Plant Disease ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 102 (12) ◽  
pp. 2667 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Fiallo-Olivé ◽  
D. T. Chirinos ◽  
R. Castro ◽  
J. Navas-Castillo

2014 ◽  
Vol 88 (18) ◽  
pp. 10598-10612 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Shen ◽  
M. B. Dallas ◽  
M. B. Goshe ◽  
L. Hanley-Bowdoin

2013 ◽  
Vol 94 (6) ◽  
pp. 1398-1406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary R. Berger ◽  
Garry Sunter

A 108 bp sequence has been identified in the tomato golden mosaic virus-yellow vein (yvTGMV) B component that is necessary and sufficient for AL2-mediated activation of the BR1 promoter. The sequence appears to have a bipartite arrangement, with elements located between −144 to −77 and −59 to −36 from the transcription start site, with both being required for activation by AL2. These sequences are located upstream of a TATA box and bind nuclear proteins from spinach, tomato and Arabidopsis. These sequences are also capable of binding Arabidopsis PPD2, which has been shown previously to interact with the yvTGMV coat protein (CP) promoter. We have identified two putative transcription factor-binding sites (CCAAT and GTGANTG10) that are conserved in sequences necessary for activation of the yvTGMV BR1, as well as the yvTGMV and cabbage leaf curl virus (CabLCV) CP promoters, which are all activated by AL2. The yvTGMV BR1 promoter exhibits AL2-independent expression in vascular tissue, similar to the yvTGMV, CabLCV and spinach curly top virus CP promoters. Together, this further confirms a common regulatory mechanism for AL2-mediated activation of bipartite begomovirus promoters.


2009 ◽  
Vol 83 (18) ◽  
pp. 9347-9355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Shah Nawaz-ul-Rehman ◽  
Shahid Mansoor ◽  
Rob W. Briddon ◽  
Claude M. Fauquet

ABSTRACT Begomoviruses (family Geminiviridae) cause major losses to crops throughout the tropical regions of the world. Begomoviruses originating from the New World (NW) and the Old World (OW) are genetically distinct. Whereas the majority of OW begomoviruses have monopartite genomes and whereas most of these associate with a class of symptom-modulating satellites (known as betasatellites), the genomes of NW begomoviruses are exclusively bipartite and do not associate with satellites. Here, we show for the first time that a betasatellite (cotton leaf curl Multan betasatellite [CLCuMuB]) associated with a serious disease of cotton across southern Asia is capable of interacting with a NW begomovirus. In the presence of CLCuMuB, the symptoms of the NW cabbage leaf curl virus (CbLCuV) are enhanced in Nicotiana benthamiana. However, CbLCuV was unable to interact with a second betasatellite, chili leaf curl betasatellite. Although CbLCuV can transreplicate CLCuMuB, satellite accumulation levels in plants were low. However, progeny CLCuMuB isolated after just one round of infection with CbLCuV contained numerous mutations. Reinoculation of one such progeny CLCuMuB with CbLCuV to N. benthamiana yielded infections with significantly higher satellite DNA levels. This suggests that betasatellites can rapidly adapt for efficient transreplication by a new helper begomovirus, including begomoviruses originating from the NW. Although the precise mechanism of transreplication of betasatellites by begomoviruses remains unknown, an analysis of betasatellite mutants suggests that the sequence(s) required for maintenance of CLCuMuB by one of its cognate begomoviruses (cotton leaf curl Rajasthan virus) differs from the sequences required for maintenance by CbLCuV. The significance of these findings and, particularly, the threat that betasatellites pose to agriculture in the NW, are discussed.


2009 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diana L Trejo-Saavedra ◽  
Jean P Vielle-Calzada ◽  
Rafael F Rivera-Bustamante

2004 ◽  
Vol 78 (20) ◽  
pp. 11161-11171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel F. Carvalho ◽  
Sondra G. Lazarowitz

ABSTRACT DNA viruses can modulate the activity of cellular acetyltransferases to regulate virus gene expression and to affect cell cycle progression in order to support virus replication. A role for protein acetylation in regulating the nuclear export of the bipartite geminivirus DNA genome was recently suggested by the findings that the viral movement protein NSP, which shuttles the viral genome between the nucleus and the cytoplasm, interacts with a novel Arabidopsis acetyltransferase, AtNSI, and the increased expression of AtNSI enhances susceptibility to Cabbage leaf curl virus infection. To further investigate the interaction of NSP and AtNSI and to establish the importance of this interaction in virus infections, we used a reverse yeast two-hybrid selection and deletion analysis to identify NSP mutants that were impaired in their ability to bind AtNSI. These mutants identified a 38-amino-acid region of NSP, to which no function had so far been assigned, as being necessary for NSP-AtNSI interaction. Three NSP missense mutants were analyzed in detail and were found to be comparable to wild-type NSP in their levels of accumulation, nucleocytoplasmic shuttling, DNA binding, and cooperative interaction with the viral cell-to-cell movement protein MP. Despite this, Cabbage leaf curl virus that expressed each mutated NSP was defective in its ability to infect Arabidopsis, exhibiting lower levels of infectivity than the wild-type virus, and delayed systemic spread of the virus and attenuated disease symptoms. Our data demonstrate the importance of the interaction of NSP with AtNSI for virus infection and pathogenicity.


2004 ◽  
Vol 78 (9) ◽  
pp. 4817-4826 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerardo Arguello-Astorga ◽  
Luisa Lopez-Ochoa ◽  
Ling-Jie Kong ◽  
Beverly M. Orozco ◽  
Sharon B. Settlage ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The geminivirus replication factor AL1 interacts with the plant retinoblastoma-related protein (pRBR) to modulate host gene expression. The AL1 protein of tomato golden mosaic virus (TGMV) binds to pRBR through an 80-amino-acid region that contains two highly predicted α-helices designated 3 and 4. Earlier studies suggested that the helix 4 motif, whose amino acid sequence is strongly conserved across geminivirus replication proteins, plays a role in pRBR binding. We generated a series of alanine substitutions across helix 4 of TGMV AL1 and examined their impact on pRBR binding using yeast two-hybrid assays. These experiments showed that several helix 4 residues are essential for efficient pRBR binding, with a critical residue being a leucine at position 148 in the middle of the motif. Various amino acid substitutions at leucine-148 indicated that both structural and side chain components contribute to pRBR binding. The replication proteins of the geminiviruses tomato yellow leaf curl virus and cabbage leaf curl virus (CaLCuV) also bound to pRBR in yeast dihybrid assays. Mutation of the leucine residue in helix 4 of CaLCuV AL1 reduced binding. Together, these results suggest that helix 4 and the conserved leucine residue are part of a pRBR-binding interface in begomovirus replication proteins.


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