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Revisiting the Roles of Tobamovirus Replicase Complex Proteins in Viral Replication and Silencing Suppression
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4251216
Author(s) Malpica-López, Nachelli; Rajeswaran, Rajendran; Beknazariants, Daria; Seguin, Jonathan; Golyaev, Victor; Farinelli, Laurent; Pooggin, Mikhail M.
Author(s) at UniBasel Malpica López, Hortensia Nachelli
Year 2018
Title Revisiting the Roles of Tobamovirus Replicase Complex Proteins in Viral Replication and Silencing Suppression
Journal Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions
Volume 31
Number 1
Pages / Article-Number 125-144
Keywords tobamovirus, replication, RNA virus
Mesh terms Arabidopsis, virology; DNA Methylation, genetics; Plant Diseases, virology; Plants, Genetically Modified; RNA Interference; RNA Replicase, metabolism; RNA, Small Interfering, metabolism; Ribonuclease III, metabolism; Sequence Analysis, RNA; Tobamovirus, physiology; Viral Proteins, metabolism; Virus Replication
Abstract Tobamoviral replicase possesses an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RDR) domain and is translated from genomic (g)RNA via a stop codon readthrough mechanism at a one-to-ten ratio relative to a shorter protein lacking the RDR domain. The two proteins share methyltransferase and helicase domains and form a heterodimer implicated in gRNA replication. The shorter protein is also implicated in suppressing RNA silencing-based antiviral defenses. Using a stop codon mutant of Oilseed rape mosaic tobamovirus (ORMV), we demonstrate that the readthrough replicase (p182) is sufficient for gRNA replication and for subgenomic RNA transcription during systemic infection in Nicotiana benthamiana and Arabidopsis thaliana. However, the mutant virus displays milder symptoms and does not interfere with HEN1-mediated methylation of viral short interfering (si)RNAs or plant small (s)RNAs. The mutant virus tends to revert the stop codon, thereby restoring expression of the shorter protein (p125), even in the absence of plant Dicer-like activities that generate viral siRNAs. Plant RDR activities that generate endogenous siRNA precursors do not prevent replication or movement of the mutant virus, and double-stranded precursors of viral siRNAs representing the entire virus genome are likely synthesized by p182. Transgenic expression of p125 partially recapitulates the ORMV disease symptoms associated with overaccumulation of plant sRNAs. Taken together, the readthrough replicase p182 is sufficient for viral replication and transcription but not for silencing suppression. By contrast, the shorter p125 protein suppresses silencing, provokes severe disease symptoms, causes overaccumulation of unmethylated viral and plant sRNAs but it is not an essential component of the viral replicase complex.
Publisher American Phytopathological Society
ISSN/ISBN 0894-0282 ; 1943-7706
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/71818/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1094/MPMI-07-17-0164-R
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29140168
ISI-Number WOS:000418323400012
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
Top-publication of... Malpica López, Hortensia Nachelli
 
   

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