Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Efficient Infection of Nicotiana benthamiana by Tomato bushy stunt virus Is Facilitated by the Coat Protein and Maintained by p19 Through Suppression of Gene Silencing

2002; American Phytopathological Society; Volume: 15; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1094/mpmi.2002.15.3.193

ISSN

1943-7706

Autores

Feng Qu, T.J. Morris,

Tópico(s)

Plant and Fungal Interactions Research

Resumo

Tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV) is one of few RNA plant viruses capable of moving systemically in some hosts in the absence of coat protein (CP). TBSV also encodes another protein (p19) that is not required for systemic movement but functions as a symptom determinant in Nicotiana ben-thamiana. Here, the role of both CP and p19 in the systemic spread has been reevaluated by utilizing transgenic N. ben-thamiana plants expressing the movement protein (MP) of Red clover necrotic mosaic virus and chimeric TBSV mutants that express CP of Turnip crinkle virus. Through careful examination of the infection phenotype of a series of mutants with changes in the CP and p19 genes, we demonstrate that both of these genes are required for efficient systemic invasion of TBSV in N. benthamiana. The CP likely enables efficient viral unloading from the vascular system in the form of assembled virions, whereas p19 enhances systemic infection by suppressing the virus-induced gene silencing.

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