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Host plants indirectly influence plant virus transmission by altering gut cysteine protease activity of aphid vectors
Year:
2017
Source of publication :
Molecular and Cellular Proteomics
Authors :
Ghanim, Murad
;
.
Volume :
16 (4 suppl 1)
Co-Authors:

Patricia V. Pinheiro, Mariko Alexander, Ana Rita Rebelo, Rogerio S. Santos, Benjamin C. Orsburn, Stewart Gray, Michelle Cilia

Facilitators :
From page:
230
To page:
243
(
Total pages:
14
)
Abstract:

The green peach aphid, Myzus persicae, is a vector of the Potato leafroll virus (PLRV, Luteoviridae), transmitted exclusively by aphids in a circulative manner. PLRV transmission efficiency was significantly reduced when a clonal lineage of M. persicae was reared on turnip as compared with the weed physalis, and this was a transient effect caused by a host-switch response. A trend of higher PLRV titer in physalis-reared aphids as compared with turnip-reared aphids was observed at 24 h and 72 h after virus acquisition. The major difference in the proteomes of these aphids was the up-regulation of predicted lysosomal enzymes, in particular the cysteine protease cathepsin B (cathB), in aphids reared on turnip. The aphid midgut is the site of PLRV acquisition, and cathB and PLRV localization were starkly different in midguts of the aphids reared on the two host plants. In viruliferous aphids that were reared on turnip, there was near complete colocalization of cathB and PLRV at the cell membranes, which was not observed in physalis-reared aphids. Chemical inhibition of cathB restored the ability of aphids reared on turnip to transmit PLRV in a dose-dependent manner, showing that the increased activity of cathB and other cysteine proteases at the cell membrane indirectly decreased virus transmission by aphids. Understanding how the host plant influences virus transmission by aphids is critical for growers to manage the spread of virus among field crops.

Note:

P. S230-S243

Related Files :
aphid
Aphidoidea
cysteine
plant diseases and disorders
Protease
vector
viruses and viroids
Show More
Related Content
More details
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M116.063495
Article number:
0
Affiliations:
Database:
Google Scholar
Publication Type:
article
;
.
Language:
English
Editors' remarks:
ID:
44973
Last updated date:
02/03/2022 17:27
Creation date:
13/11/2019 08:59
You may also be interested in
Scientific Publication
Host plants indirectly influence plant virus transmission by altering gut cysteine protease activity of aphid vectors
16 (4 suppl 1)

Patricia V. Pinheiro, Mariko Alexander, Ana Rita Rebelo, Rogerio S. Santos, Benjamin C. Orsburn, Stewart Gray, Michelle Cilia

Host plants indirectly influence plant virus transmission by altering gut cysteine protease activity of aphid vectors

The green peach aphid, Myzus persicae, is a vector of the Potato leafroll virus (PLRV, Luteoviridae), transmitted exclusively by aphids in a circulative manner. PLRV transmission efficiency was significantly reduced when a clonal lineage of M. persicae was reared on turnip as compared with the weed physalis, and this was a transient effect caused by a host-switch response. A trend of higher PLRV titer in physalis-reared aphids as compared with turnip-reared aphids was observed at 24 h and 72 h after virus acquisition. The major difference in the proteomes of these aphids was the up-regulation of predicted lysosomal enzymes, in particular the cysteine protease cathepsin B (cathB), in aphids reared on turnip. The aphid midgut is the site of PLRV acquisition, and cathB and PLRV localization were starkly different in midguts of the aphids reared on the two host plants. In viruliferous aphids that were reared on turnip, there was near complete colocalization of cathB and PLRV at the cell membranes, which was not observed in physalis-reared aphids. Chemical inhibition of cathB restored the ability of aphids reared on turnip to transmit PLRV in a dose-dependent manner, showing that the increased activity of cathB and other cysteine proteases at the cell membrane indirectly decreased virus transmission by aphids. Understanding how the host plant influences virus transmission by aphids is critical for growers to manage the spread of virus among field crops.

P. S230-S243

Scientific Publication
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