RESUMO
The growing demand for sustainable platforms for biomolecule manufacturing has fuelled the development of plant-based production systems. Agroinfiltration, the current industry standard, offers several advantages but faces limitations for large-scale production due to high operational costs and batch-to-batch variability. Alternatively, here, we describe the CuBe system, a novel bean yellow dwarf virus (BeYDV)-derived conditional replicative expression platform stably transformed in Nicotiana benthamiana and activated by copper sulphate (CuSO4), an inexpensive and widely used agricultural input. The CuBe system utilizes a synthetic circuit of four genetic modules integrated into the plant genome: (i) a replicative vector harbouring the gene of interest (GOI) flanked by cis-acting elements for geminiviral replication and novelly arranged to enable transgene transcription exclusively upon formation of the circular replicon, (ii) copper-inducible Rep/RepA proteins essential for replicon formation, (iii) the yeast-derived CUP2-Gal4 copper-responsive transcriptional activator for Rep/RepA expression, and (iv) a copper-inducible Flp recombinase to minimize basal Rep/RepA expression. CuSO4 application triggers the activation of the system, leading to the formation of extrachromosomal replicons, expression of the GOI, and accumulation of the desired recombinant protein. We demonstrate the functionality of the CuBe system in N. benthamiana plants expressing high levels of eGFP and an anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibody upon copper treatment. Notably, the system is functional in post-harvest applications, a strategy with high potential impact for large-scale biomanufacturing. This work presents the CuBe system as a promising alternative to agroinfiltration for cost-effective and scalable production of recombinant proteins in plants.
RESUMO
Plants evolve nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat receptors (NLRs) to induce immunity. Activated coiled-coil (CC) domain containing NLRs (CNLs) oligomerize and form apparent cation channels promoting calcium influx and cell death, with the alpha-1 helix of the individual CC domains penetrating the plasma membranes. Some CNLs are characterized by putative N-myristoylation and S-acylation sites in their CC domain, potentially mediating permanent membrane association. Whether activated Potentially Membrane Localized NLRs (PMLs) mediate cell death and calcium influx in a similar way is unknown. We uncovered the cell-death function at the vacuole of an atypical but conserved Arabidopsis PML, PML5, which has a significant deletion in its CCG10/GA domain. Active PML5 oligomers localize in Golgi membranes and the tonoplast, alter vacuolar morphology, and induce cell death, with the short N-terminus being sufficient. Mutant analysis supports a potential role of PMLs in plant immunity. PML5-like deletions are found in several Brassicales paralogs, pointing to the evolutionary importance of this innovation. PML5, with its minimal CC domain, represents the first identified CNL utilizing vacuolar-stored calcium for cell death induction.
Assuntos
Proteínas de Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis , Morte Celular , Vacúolos , Vacúolos/metabolismo , Arabidopsis/genética , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Morte Celular/genética , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/genética , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Proteínas NLR/genética , Proteínas NLR/metabolismo , Deleção de Sequência , Imunidade Vegetal/genética , Domínios Proteicos , Sequência de AminoácidosRESUMO
Viruses, causal agents of devastating diseases in plants, are obligate intracellular pathogens composed of a nucleic acid genome and a limited number of viral proteins. The diversity of plant viruses, their diminutive molecular nature, and their symplastic localization pose challenges to understanding the interplay between these pathogens and their hosts in the currently accepted framework of plant innate immunity. It is clear, nevertheless, that plants can recognize the presence of a virus and activate antiviral immune responses, although our knowledge of the breadth of invasion signals and the underpinning sensing events is far from complete. Below, I discuss some of the demonstrated or hypothesized mechanisms enabling viral recognition in plants, the step preceding the onset of antiviral immunity, as well as the strategies viruses have evolved to evade or suppress their detection.
Assuntos
Doenças das Plantas , Imunidade Vegetal , Vírus de Plantas , Plantas , Vírus de Plantas/fisiologia , Vírus de Plantas/patogenicidade , Vírus de Plantas/imunologia , Vírus de Plantas/genética , Doenças das Plantas/virologia , Doenças das Plantas/imunologia , Plantas/virologia , Plantas/imunologia , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno/imunologia , Evasão da Resposta ImuneRESUMO
Plant pathogens manipulate host development, facilitating colonization and proliferation. Ralstonia solanacearum is a soil-borne bacterial pathogen that penetrates roots and colonizes plants through the vascular system, causing wilting and death. Here, we find that RipAC, an effector protein from R. solanacearum, alters root development in Arabidopsis, promoting the formation of lateral roots and root hairs. RipAC interacts with CELLULOSE SYNTHASE (CESA)-INTERACTIVE PROTEIN 1 (CSI1), which regulates the activity of CESA complexes at the plasma membrane. RipAC disrupts CESA-CSI1 interaction, leading to a reduction in cellulose content, root developmental alterations, and a promotion of bacterial pathogenicity. We find that CSI1 also associates with the receptor kinase FERONIA, forming a complex that negatively regulates immunity in roots; this interaction, however, is not affected by RipAC. Our work reveals a bacterial virulence strategy that selectively affects the activities of a host target, promoting anatomical alterations that facilitate infection without causing activation of immunity.
Assuntos
Arabidopsis , Parede Celular , Doenças das Plantas , Raízes de Plantas , Ralstonia solanacearum , Raízes de Plantas/microbiologia , Raízes de Plantas/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Arabidopsis/microbiologia , Arabidopsis/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Ralstonia solanacearum/patogenicidade , Ralstonia solanacearum/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Ralstonia solanacearum/metabolismo , Doenças das Plantas/microbiologia , Parede Celular/metabolismo , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Microbiologia do Solo , Glucosiltransferases/metabolismoRESUMO
The Ti-TAN TurboID plasmid toolbox enables proximity labeling applications in transient assays in Nicotiana benthamiana in a fast and cost-efficient manner, making TurboID-based proximity labeling broadly accessible to plant scientists.
Assuntos
Nicotiana , Titânio , Nicotiana/genética , Plantas , Plasmídeos/genéticaRESUMO
N 6-methyladenosine (m6A) is a common epitranscriptional mRNA modification in eukaryotes. Thirteen putative m6A readers, mostly annotated as EVOLUTIONARILY CONSERVED C-TERMINAL REGION (ECT) proteins, have been identified in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), but few have been characterized. Here, we show that the Arabidopsis m6A reader ECT1 modulates salicylic acid (SA)-mediated plant stress responses. ECT1 undergoes liquid-liquid phase separation in vitro, and its N-terminal prion-like domain is critical for forming in vivo cytosolic biomolecular condensates in response to SA or bacterial pathogens. Fluorescence-activated particle sorting coupled with quantitative PCR analyses unveiled that ECT1 sequesters SA-induced m6A modification-prone mRNAs through its conserved aromatic cage to facilitate their decay in cytosolic condensates, thereby dampening SA-mediated stress responses. Consistent with this finding, ECT1 overexpression promotes bacterial multiplication in plants. Collectively, our findings unequivocally link ECT1-associated cytosolic condensates to SA-dependent plant stress responses, advancing the current understanding of m6A readers and the SA signaling network.
Assuntos
Adenina/análogos & derivados , Proteínas de Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Ácido Salicílico/metabolismo , RNA Mensageiro/genética , RNA Mensageiro/metabolismo , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/genética , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Regulação da Expressão Gênica de PlantasRESUMO
Multilayered defense responses are activated upon pathogen attack. Viruses utilize a number of strategies to maximize the coding capacity of their small genomes and produce viral proteins for infection, including suppression of host defense. Here, we reveal translation leakage as one of these strategies: two viral effectors encoded by tomato golden mosaic virus, chloroplast-localized C4 (cC4) and membrane-associated C4 (mC4), are translated from two in-frame start codons and function cooperatively to suppress defense. cC4 localizes in chloroplasts, to which it recruits NbPUB4 to induce ubiquitination of the outer membrane; as a result, this organelle is degraded, and chloroplast-mediated defenses are abrogated. However, chloroplast-localized cC4 induces the production of singlet oxygen (1O2), which in turn promotes translocation of the 1O2 sensor NbMBS1 from the cytosol to the nucleus, where it activates expression of the CERK1 gene. Importantly, an antiviral effect exerted by CERK1 is countered by mC4, localized at the plasma membrane. mC4, like cC4, recruits NbPUB4 and promotes the ubiquitination and subsequent degradation of CERK1, suppressing membrane-based, receptor-like kinase-dependent defenses. Importantly, this translation leakage strategy seems to be conserved in multiple viral species and is related to host range. This finding suggests that stacking of different cellular antiviral responses could be an effective way to abrogate viral infection and engineer sustainable resistance to major crop viral diseases in the field.
Assuntos
Antivirais , Proteínas Virais , Proteínas Virais/genética , Fases de Leitura AbertaRESUMO
Viruses comprise the most abundant genetic material in the biosphere; however, global viral genomic population (virome) has been largely underestimated. Recently, high-throughput sequencing (HTS) has provided a powerful tool for the detection of known viruses and the discovery of novel viral species from environmental and individual samples using metagenomics and ecogenomics approaches, respectively. Viruses with circular DNA single-stranded (ssDNA) genomes belonging to the begomovirus genera (family Geminiviridae) constitute the largest group of emerging plant viruses worldwide. The knowledge of begomoviruses viromes is mostly restricted to crop plant systems; nevertheless, it has been described that noncultivated plants specifically at the interface between wild and cultivated plants are important reservoirs leading to viral evolution and the emergence of new diseases. Here we present a protocol that allows the identification and isolation of known and novel begomoviruses species infecting cultivated and noncultivated plant species. The method consists of circular viral molecules enrichment by rolling circle amplification (RCA) from begomovirus-positive total plant DNA, followed by NGS-based metagenomic sequencing. Subsequently, metagenomic reads are processed for taxonomic classification using Viromescan software and a customized Geminiviridae family database, and begomovirus-related reads are used for contigs assembly and annotation using Spades software and Blastn algorithm, respectively. Then, the obtained begomovirus-related signatures are used as templates for specific primers design and implemented for PCR-based ecogenomic identification of individual samples harboring the corresponding viral species. Lastly, full-length begomovirus genomes are obtained by RCA-based amplification from total plant DNA of selected individual samples, cloning, and viral molecular identity corroborated by Sanger sequencing. Conclusively, the identification and isolation of a novel monopartite begomovirus species native to the New World (NW) named Gallium leaf deformation virus (GLDV) is shown.
Assuntos
Begomovirus , DNA Viral , DNA Viral/genética , Filogenia , Plantas/genética , Begomovirus/genética , Genoma Viral , Metagenômica/métodos , DNA de Plantas , DNA Circular/genética , Doenças das PlantasRESUMO
Positive-sense single-stranded RNA (+ssRNA) viruses, the most abundant viruses of eukaryotes in nature, require the synthesis of negative-sense RNA (-RNA) using their genomic (positive-sense) RNA (+RNA) as a template for replication. Based on current evidence, viral proteins are translated via viral +RNAs, whereas -RNA is considered to be a viral replication intermediate without coding capacity. Here, we report that plant and animal +ssRNA viruses contain small open reading frames (ORFs) in their -RNA (reverse ORFs [rORFs]). Using turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) as a model for plant +ssRNA viruses, we demonstrate that small proteins encoded by rORFs display specific subcellular localizations, and confirm the presence of rORF2 in infected cells through mass spectrometry analysis. The protein encoded by TuMV rORF2 forms punctuate granules that are localized in the perinuclear region and co-localized with viral replication complexes. The rORF2 protein can directly interact with the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, and mutation of rORF2 completely abolishes virus infection, whereas ectopic expression of rORF2 rescues the mutant virus. Furthermore, we show that several rORFs in the -RNA of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) have the ability to suppress type I interferon production and facilitate the infection of vesicular stomatitis virus. In addition, we provide evidence that TuMV might utilize internal ribosome entry sites to translate these small rORFs. Taken together, these findings indicate that the -RNA of +ssRNA viruses can also have the coding capacity and that small proteins encoded therein play critical roles in viral infection, revealing a viral proteome larger than previously thought.
Assuntos
Vírus de Plantas , Potyvirus , Viroses , Animais , RNA Viral/genética , Proteínas Virais/genética , Proteínas Virais/metabolismo , Potyvirus/genética , Vírus de Plantas/genéticaRESUMO
Cellular organisms have evolved different strategies to defend themselves against the invasion by viruses. In plants, RNA interference (RNAi) or RNA silencing, which is triggered by virus-derived double-stranded (ds)RNA, is considered the main antiviral defence mechanism. Martínez-Pérez et al have now uncovered an additional plant antiviral pathway, termed by the authors "m6 A-YTHDF axis," which relies on the modification and subsequent recognition of the viral RNA.
Assuntos
Vírus de Plantas , Interferência de RNA , Vírus de Plantas/genética , Antivirais , RNA de Cadeia Dupla/genética , RNA Viral/genéticaRESUMO
Movement proteins (MPs) encoded by plant viruses deliver viral genomes to plasmodesmata (PD) to ensure intracellular and intercellular transport. However, how the MPs encoded by monopartite geminiviruses are targeted to PD is obscure. Here, we demonstrate that the C5 protein of tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) anchors to PD during the viral infection following trafficking from the nucleus along microfilaments in Nicotiana benthamiana. C5 could move between cells and partially complement the traffic of a movement-deficient turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) mutant (TuMV-GFP-P3N-PIPO-m1) into adjacent cells. The TYLCV-C5 null mutant (TYLCV-mC5) attenuates viral pathogenicity and decreases viral DNA and protein accumulation, and ectopic overexpression of C5 enhances viral DNA accumulation. Interaction assays between TYLCV-C5 and the other eight viral proteins described in TYLCV reveal that C5 associates with C2 in the nucleus and with V2 in the cytoplasm and at PD. The V2 protein is mainly localized in the nucleus and cytoplasmic granules when expressed alone; in contrast, V2 forms small punctate granules at PD when co-expressed with C5 or in TYLCV-infected cells. The interaction of V2 and C5 also facilitates their nuclear export. Furthermore, C5-mediated PD localization of V2 is conserved in two other geminiviruses. Therefore, this study solves a long-sought-after functional connection between PD and the geminivirus movement and improves our understanding of geminivirus-encoded MPs and their potential cellular and molecular mechanisms.
Assuntos
Begomovirus , Geminiviridae , Geminiviridae/genética , DNA Viral , Plasmodesmos , Begomovirus/genética , Nicotiana/genética , Doenças das PlantasRESUMO
Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) is a monopartite geminivirus, and one of the most devastating plant viruses in the world. TYLCV is traditionally known to encode six viral proteins in bidirectional and partially overlapping open reading frames (ORFs). However, recent studies have shown that TYLCV encodes additional small proteins with specific subcellular localizations and potential virulence functions. Here, a novel protein named C7, encoded by a newly-described ORF in the complementary strand, was identified as part of the TYLCV proteome using mass spectrometry. The C7 protein localized to the nucleus and cytoplasm, both in the absence and presence of the virus. C7 was found to interact with two other TYLCV-encoded proteins: with C2 in the nucleus, and with V2 in the cytoplasm, forming conspicuous granules. Mutation of C7 start codon ATG to ACG to block the translation of C7 delayed the onset of viral infection, and the mutant virus caused milder virus symptoms and less accumulations of viral DNAs and proteins. Using the potato virus X (PVX)-based recombinant vector, we found that ectopic overexpression of C7 resulted in more severe mosaic symptoms and promoted a higher accumulation of PVX-encoded coat protein in the late virus infection stage. In addition, C7 was also found to inhibit GFP-induced RNA silencing moderately. This study demonstrates that the novel C7 protein encoded by TYLCV is a pathogenicity factor and a weak RNA silencing suppressor, and that it plays a critical role during TYLCV infection.
Assuntos
Begomovirus , Geminiviridae , Geminiviridae/genética , Interferência de RNA , Proteínas Virais/genética , Proteínas Virais/metabolismo , Doenças das PlantasRESUMO
Chloroplast-to-nucleus retrograde signaling (RS) pathways are critical in modulating plant development and stress adaptation. Among chloroplast proteins mediating RS pathways, GENOMES UNCOUPLED1 (GUN1) represses the transcription of the nuclear transcription factors GOLDEN2-LIKE1 (GLK1) and GLK2 that positively regulate chloroplast biogenesis. Given the extensive exploration of the function of GUN1 in biogenic RS carried out in previous years, our understanding of its role in plant stress responses remains scarce. Here, we revealed that GUN1 contributes to the expression of salicylic acid (SA)-responsive genes (SARGs) through transcriptional repression of GLK1/2 in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Loss of GUN1 significantly compromised the SA responsiveness in plants, concomitant with the upregulation of GLK1/2 transcripts. In contrast, knockout of GLK1/2 potentiated the expression of SARGs and led to enhanced stress responses. Chromatin immunoprecipitation, coupled with quantitative PCR and related reverse genetic approaches, unveiled that in gun1, GLK1/2 might modulate SA-triggered stress responses by stimulating the expression of WRKY18 and WRKY40, transcriptional repressors of SARGs. In summary, we demonstrate that a hierarchical regulatory module, consisting of GUN1-GLK1/2-WRKY18/40, modulates SA signaling, opening a research avenue regarding a latent GUN1 function in plant-environment interactions.
Assuntos
Proteínas de Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Ácido Salicílico/metabolismo , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo , Cloroplastos/metabolismo , Regulação da Expressão Gênica de Plantas , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/genética , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/metabolismoRESUMO
Jasmonates (JAs) are phytohormones that finely regulate critical biological processes, including plant development and defense. JASMONATE ZIM-DOMAIN (JAZ) proteins are crucial transcriptional regulators that keep JA-responsive genes in a repressed state. In the presence of JA-Ile, JAZ repressors are ubiquitinated and targeted for degradation by the ubiquitin/proteasome system, allowing the activation of downstream transcription factors and, consequently, the induction of JA-responsive genes. A growing body of evidence has shown that JA signaling is crucial in defending against plant viruses and their insect vectors. Here, we describe the interaction of C2 proteins from two tomato-infecting geminiviruses from the genus Begomovirus, tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) and tomato yellow curl Sardinia virus (TYLCSaV), with the transcriptional repressor JAZ8 from Arabidopsis thaliana and its closest orthologue in tomato, SlJAZ9. Both JAZ and C2 proteins colocalize in the nucleus, forming discrete nuclear speckles. Overexpression of JAZ8 did not lead to altered responses to TYLCV infection in Arabidopsis; however, knock-down of JAZ8 favors geminiviral infection. Low levels of JAZ8 likely affect the viral infection specifically, since JAZ8-silenced plants neither display obvious developmental phenotypes nor present differences in their interaction with the viral insect vector. In summary, our results show that the geminivirus-encoded C2 interacts with JAZ8 in the nucleus, and suggest that this plant protein exerts an anti-geminiviral effect.
Assuntos
Proteínas de Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis , Proteínas Correpressoras , Geminiviridae , Doenças das Plantas , Arabidopsis/genética , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Arabidopsis/virologia , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/genética , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Proteínas Correpressoras/genética , Proteínas Correpressoras/metabolismo , Ciclopentanos/metabolismo , Geminiviridae/metabolismo , Regulação da Expressão Gênica de Plantas , Oxilipinas/metabolismo , Doenças das Plantas/genética , Doenças das Plantas/virologia , Proteínas de Plantas/metabolismo , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo , Vírus de PlantasRESUMO
Geminiviruses are causal agents of devastating diseases in crops. Geminiviral genomes are single-stranded (ss) circular DNA molecules that replicate in the nucleus of the infected cell through double-stranded (ds) intermediates by co-opting the plant DNA replication machinery. However, the identity of the plant DNA polymerases enabling geminiviral replication has remained largely elusive. Recently, we showed that DNA polymerase α mediates the ss-to-ds conversion of tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV), and is therefore essential for the infection. Here, we provide data indicating that the primase subunits of DNA polymerase α, PRIM1 and PRIM2, are also required for TYLCV replication.
RESUMO
Viruses are intracellular parasites that have evolved to effectively manipulate the cells they infect. As a result of the viral infection, multiple cellular processes are altered, suppressed, or redirected, partially due to the viral co-option of the host's molecular machinery. RNA biology plays a central role in virus-host interactions, since it is at the basis of viral gene expression, splicing of viral transcripts, anti-viral RNA silencing, and-at least in the case of RNA viruses-genome replication, and therefore is heavily targeted by viruses. The plant DNA geminiviruses, causal agents of devasting diseases in crops worldwide, are no exception, and RNA processing is tightly entrenched in their infection cycle. In this review, we will discuss the relevance of the manipulation of RNA biology by geminiviruses for a successful viral infection and the underlying molecular mechanisms, and suggest some of the multiple remaining open questions in this field.
Assuntos
Geminiviridae , Geminiviridae/genética , RNA de Plantas , Produtos Agrícolas/genética , Interferência de RNA , Biologia , Doenças das PlantasRESUMO
Viruses are strict intracellular parasites that rely on the proteins encoded in their genomes for the effective manipulation of the infected cell that ultimately enables a successful infection. Viral proteins have to be produced during the cell invasion and takeover in sufficient amounts and in a timely manner. Silencing suppressor proteins evolved by plant viruses can boost the production of viral proteins; although, additional mechanisms for the regulation of viral protein production likely exist. The strongest silencing suppressor encoded by the geminivirus tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) is V2: V2 suppresses both post-transcriptional and transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS and TGS), activities that are associated with its localization in punctate cytoplasmic structures and in the nucleus, respectively. However, V2 has been previously described to largely localize in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), although the biological relevance of this distribution remains mysterious. Here, we confirm the association of V2 to the ER in Nicotiana benthamiana and assess the silencing suppression activity-independent impact of V2 on protein accumulation. Our results indicate that V2 has no obvious influence on the localization of ER-synthesized receptor-like kinases (RLKs) or ER quality control (ERQC)/ER-associated degradation (ERAD), but dramatically enhances the accumulation of the viral C4 protein, which is co-translationally myristoylated, possibly in proximity to the ER. By using the previously described V2C84S/86S mutant, in which the silencing suppression activity is abolished, we uncouple RNA silencing from the observed effect. Therefore, this work uncovers a novel function of V2, independent of its capacity to suppress silencing, in the promotion of the accumulation of another crucial viral protein.