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1.
PLoS Pathog ; 20(1): e1011973, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38271470

ABSTRACT

Differential accumulation of the distinct genome segments is a common feature of viruses with segmented genomes. The reproducible and specific pattern of genome segment accumulation within the host is referred to as the "genome formula". There is speculation and some experimental support for a functional role of the genome formula by modulating gene expression through copy number variations. However, the mechanisms of genome formula regulation have not yet been identified. In this study, we investigated whether the genome formula of the octopartite nanovirus faba bean necrotic stunt virus (FBNSV) is regulated by processes acting at the individual segment vs. viral population levels. We used a leaf infiltration system to show that the two most accumulated genome segments of the FBNSV possess a greater intrinsic accumulation capacity in Vicia faba tissues than the other segments. Nevertheless, processes acting at the individual segment level are insufficient to generate the genome formula, suggesting the involvement of additional mechanisms acting at the supra-segment level. Indeed, the absence of segments with important functions during systemic infection strongly modifies the relative frequency of the others, indicating that the genome formula is a property of the segment group. Together, these results demonstrate that the FBNSV genome formula is shaped by a complex process acting at both the individual segment and the segment group levels.


Subject(s)
Nanovirus , Vicia faba , DNA Copy Number Variations , Plant Diseases , Vicia faba/genetics , Nanovirus/genetics , Plant Leaves/genetics , Genome, Viral
2.
PLoS Pathog ; 19(2): e1011161, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36745680

ABSTRACT

There is growing evidence that plant viruses manipulate their hosts and vectors in ways that increase transmission. However, to date only few viral components underlying these phenomena have been identified. Here we show that cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) protein P2 modifies the feeding behavior of its aphid vector. P2 is necessary for CaMV transmission because it mediates binding of virus particles to the aphid mouthparts. We compared aphid feeding behavior on plants infected with the wild-type CaMV strain Cabb B-JI or with a deletion mutant strain, Cabb B-JIΔP2, which does not produce P2. Only aphids probing Cabb B-JI infected plants doubled the number of test punctures during the first contact with the plant, indicating a role of P2. Membrane feeding assays with purified P2 and virus particles confirmed that these viral products alone are sufficient to cause the changes in aphid probing. The behavior modifications were not observed on plants infected with a CaMV mutant expressing P2Rev5, unable to bind to the mouthparts. These results are in favor of a virus manipulation, where attachment of P2 to a specific region in the aphid stylets-the acrostyle-exercises a direct effect on vector behavior at a crucial moment, the first vector contact with the infected plant, which is essential for virus acquisition.


Subject(s)
Aphids , Plant Viruses , Animals , Caulimovirus/genetics , Feeding Behavior , Plants , Plant Diseases
3.
PLoS Pathog ; 19(1): e1011086, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36622854

ABSTRACT

Nanoviruses are plant multipartite viruses with a genome composed of six to eight circular single-stranded DNA segments. The distinct genome segments are encapsidated individually in icosahedral particles that measure ≈18 nm in diameter. Recent studies on the model species Faba bean necrotic stunt virus (FBNSV) revealed that complete sets of genomic segments rarely occur in infected plant cells and that the function encoded by a given viral segment can complement the others across neighbouring cells, presumably by translocation of the gene products through unknown molecular processes. This allows the viral genome to replicate, assemble into viral particles and infect anew, even with the distinct genome segments scattered in different cells. Here, we question the form under which the FBNSV genetic material propagates long distance within the vasculature of host plants and, in particular, whether viral particle assembly is required. Using structure-guided mutagenesis based on a 3.2 Å resolution cryogenic-electron-microscopy reconstruction of the FBNSV particles, we demonstrate that specific site-directed mutations preventing capsid formation systematically suppress FBNSV long-distance movement, and thus systemic infection of host plants, despite positive detection of the mutated coat protein when the corresponding segment is agroinfiltrated into plant leaves. These results strongly suggest that the viral genome does not propagate within the plant vascular system under the form of uncoated DNA molecules or DNA:coat-protein complexes, but rather moves long distance as assembled viral particles.


Subject(s)
Nanovirus , Vicia faba , Nanovirus/genetics , Capsid Proteins/genetics , Vicia faba/genetics , DNA, Viral/genetics , Virion/genetics , Genome, Viral , Mutagenesis
4.
Arch Virol ; 166(9): 2573-2578, 2021 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34148142

ABSTRACT

A novel geminivirus was identified in France and Spain in asymptomatic plants of white clover (Trifolium repens) and shrub medick (Medicago arborea). Its genome has the hallmarks of a capulavirus, and its relationship to other capulaviruses was confirmed by phylogenetic analysis. White clover isolates formed a tight cluster in the phylogenetic tree, while shrub medick isolates formed two distinct, more divergent groups with sequence identity values close to the species cutoff. These three groups have likely participated in recombination events involving alfalfa leaf curl virus and French bean severe leaf curl virus. The name "trifolium virus 1" (TrV1) is proposed for this new Capulavirus. Three TrV1 genotypes (TrV1-A, TrV1-B, and TrV1-C) were clearly distinguished.


Subject(s)
Phylogeny , Trifolium/virology , Viruses, Unclassified/classification , Viruses, Unclassified/genetics , Viruses, Unclassified/isolation & purification , Amino Acid Sequence , Biodiversity , DNA Viruses/genetics , Fabaceae/virology , Geminiviridae/classification , Geminiviridae/genetics , Geminiviridae/isolation & purification , Genotype , Open Reading Frames , Plant Diseases/virology , Sequence Analysis, DNA
5.
Viruses ; 12(3)2020 03 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32164363

ABSTRACT

Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) plant viruses belong to the families Geminiviridae and Nanoviridae. They are transmitted by Hemipteran insects in a circulative, mostly non-propagative, manner. While geminiviruses are transmitted by leafhoppers, treehoppers, whiteflies and aphids, nanoviruses are transmitted exclusively by aphids. Circulative transmission involves complex virus-vector interactions in which epithelial cells have to be crossed and defense mechanisms counteracted. Vector taxa are considered a relevant taxonomic criterion for virus classification, indicating that viruses can evolve specific interactions with their vectors. Thus, we predicted that, although nanoviruses and geminiviruses represent related viral families, they have evolved distinct interactions with their vector. This prediction is also supported by the non-structural Nuclear Shuttle Protein (NSP) that is involved in vector transmission in nanoviruses but has no similar function in geminiviruses. Thanks to the recent discovery of aphid-transmitted geminiviruses, this prediction could be tested for the geminivirus alfalfa leaf curl virus (ALCV) and the nanovirus faba bean necrotic stunt virus (FBNSV) in their common vector, Aphis craccivora. Estimations of viral load in midgut and head of aphids, precise localization of viral DNA in cells of insect vectors and host plants, and virus transmission tests revealed that the pathway of the two viruses across the body of their common vector differs both quantitatively and qualitatively.


Subject(s)
Aphids/virology , Coinfection , Geminiviridae/physiology , Insect Vectors/virology , Nanovirus/physiology , Animals , DNA, Viral , Geminiviridae/classification , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/pathology , Intestinal Mucosa/virology , Nanovirus/classification , Phenotype , Plant Diseases/virology , Plant Viruses/physiology , Saliva/virology
6.
J Virol ; 94(9)2020 04 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32102876

ABSTRACT

Vector transmission plays a primary role in the life cycle of viruses, and insects are the most common vectors. An important mode of vector transmission, reported only for plant viruses, is circulative nonpropagative transmission whereby the virus cycles within the body of its insect vector, from gut to salivary glands and saliva, without replicating. This mode of transmission has been extensively studied in the viral families Luteoviridae and Geminiviridae and is also reported for Nanoviridae The biology of viruses within these three families is different, and whether the viruses have evolved similar molecular/cellular virus-vector interactions is unclear. In particular, nanoviruses have a multipartite genome organization, and how the distinct genome segments encapsidated individually transit through the insect body is unknown. Here, using a combination of fluorescent in situ hybridization and immunofluorescence, we monitor distinct proteins and genome segments of the nanovirus Faba bean necrotic stunt virus (FBNSV) during transcytosis through the gut and salivary gland cells of its aphid vector Acyrthosiphon pisum FBNSV specifically transits through cells of the anterior midgut and principal salivary gland cells, a route similar to that of geminiviruses but distinct from that of luteoviruses. Our results further demonstrate that a large number of virus particles enter every single susceptible cell so that distinct genome segments always remain together. Finally, we confirm that the success of nanovirus-vector interaction depends on a nonstructural helper component, the viral protein nuclear shuttle protein (NSP), which is shown to be mandatory for viral accumulation within gut cells.IMPORTANCE An intriguing mode of vector transmission described only for plant viruses is circulative nonpropagative transmission, whereby the virus passes through the gut and salivary glands of the insect vector without replicating. Three plant virus families are transmitted this way, but details of the molecular/cellular mechanisms of the virus-vector interaction are missing. This is striking for nanoviruses that are believed to interact with aphid vectors in ways similar to those of luteoviruses or geminiviruses but for which empirical evidence is scarce. We here confirm that nanoviruses follow a within-vector route similar to that of geminiviruses but distinct from that of luteoviruses. We show that they produce a nonstructural protein mandatory for viral entry into gut cells, a unique phenomenon for this mode of transmission. Finally, noting that nanoviruses are multipartite viruses, we demonstrate that a large number of viral particles penetrate susceptible cells of the vector, allowing distinct genome segments to remain together.


Subject(s)
Aphids/virology , Nanovirus/metabolism , Animals , DNA Viruses/genetics , Geminiviridae/genetics , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence/methods , Insect Vectors/metabolism , Insect Vectors/virology , Luteoviridae/genetics , Nanovirus/pathogenicity , Plant Diseases/virology , Plant Viruses/genetics , Viral Proteins/genetics , Virion/genetics
7.
PLoS One ; 14(10): e0223149, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31600251

ABSTRACT

Mutualistic plant-microbe associations are widespread in natural ecosystems and have made major contributions throughout the evolutionary history of terrestrial plants. Amongst the most remarkable of these are the so-called root endosymbioses, resulting from the intracellular colonization of host tissues by either arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi or nitrogen-fixing bacteria that both provide key nutrients to the host in exchange for energy-rich photosynthates. Actinorhizal host plants, members of the Eurosid 1 clade, are able to associate with both AM fungi and nitrogen-fixing actinomycetes known as Frankia. Currently, little is known about the molecular signaling that allows these plants to recognize their fungal and bacterial partners. In this article, we describe the use of an in vivo Ca2+ reporter to identify symbiotic signaling responses to AM fungi in roots of both Casuarina glauca and Discaria trinervis, actinorhizal species with contrasting modes of Frankia colonization. This approach has revealed that, for both actinorhizal hosts, the short-chain chitin oligomer chitotetraose is able to mimic AM fungal exudates in activating the conserved symbiosis signaling pathway (CSSP) in epidermal root cells targeted by AM fungi. These results mirror findings in other AM host plants including legumes and the monocot rice. In addition, we show that chitotetraose is a more efficient elicitor of CSSP activation compared to AM fungal lipo-chitooligosaccharides. These findings reinforce the likely role of short-chain chitin oligomers during the initial stages of the AM association, and are discussed in relation to both our current knowledge about molecular signaling during Frankia recognition as well as the different microsymbiont root colonization mechanisms employed by actinorhizal hosts.


Subject(s)
Fagales/genetics , Frankia/genetics , Oligosaccharides/genetics , Symbiosis/genetics , Fabaceae/genetics , Fabaceae/growth & development , Fabaceae/microbiology , Fagales/growth & development , Fagales/microbiology , Frankia/growth & development , Frankia/metabolism , Mycorrhizae/growth & development , Mycorrhizae/metabolism , Nitrogen Fixation/genetics , Plant Root Nodulation/genetics , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/growth & development , Plant Roots/microbiology , Signal Transduction/genetics
8.
Elife ; 82019 03 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30857590

ABSTRACT

A founding paradigm in virology is that the spatial unit of the viral replication cycle is an individual cell. Multipartite viruses have a segmented genome where each segment is encapsidated separately. In this situation the viral genome is not recapitulated in a single virus particle but in the viral population. How multipartite viruses manage to efficiently infect individual cells with all segments, thus with the whole genome information, is a long-standing but perhaps deceptive mystery. By localizing and quantifying the genome segments of a nanovirus in host plant tissues we show that they rarely co-occur within individual cells. We further demonstrate that distinct segments accumulate independently in different cells and that the viral system is functional through complementation across cells. Our observation deviates from the classical conceptual framework in virology and opens an alternative possibility (at least for nanoviruses) where the infection can operate at a level above the individual cell level, defining a viral multicellular way of life.


Subject(s)
DNA, Viral/genetics , Genome, Viral , Nanovirus/genetics , Plant Diseases/virology , Vicia faba/virology , Virion/genetics , DNA Viruses , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Microscopy, Confocal , Nanovirus/physiology , Regression Analysis , Virus Replication
9.
Bio Protoc ; 9(23): e3443, 2019 Dec 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33654938

ABSTRACT

A founding paradigm in virology is that the spatial unit of the viral replication cycle is an individual cell. This concept applied to multipartite viruses-which have a genome composed of two or more nucleic acid segments, each individually encapsulated-implies that all segments constituting a viral genome need to coinfect the same host cell for replication to occur. Would this requirement be verified, it would constitute a major cost for extreme cases of multipartition such as the Faba bean necrotic stunt virus (FBNSV, nanovirus) whose genome is composed of eight complementary segments, each encoding a single gene ( Grigoras et al., 2009 ). To address this question, we followed the distribution of the FBNSV genome segments by fluorescence in situ hybridization combined to immunolocalization of the replication-controlling viral protein within the cells of the host plant: Vicia Faba. A rapid and efficient protocol to localize viral transcripts in plant and insect hosts has been developed earlier ( Ghanim et al., 2009 ). We here improve this method by using random-primed labeled probes and apply it to the detection and quantification of the individual segments composing the FBNSV genome. Moreover, we combine this technique with immunolocalization so that both viral segments and proteins can be visualized within the same samples.

10.
New Phytol ; 219(3): 1018-1030, 2018 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29790172

ABSTRACT

Nitrogen-fixing filamentous Frankia colonize the root tissues of its actinorhizal host Discaria trinervis via an exclusively intercellular pathway. Here we present studies aimed at uncovering mechanisms associated with this little-researched mode of root entry, and in particular the extent to which the host plant is an active partner during this process. Detailed characterization of the expression patterns of infection-associated actinorhizal host genes has provided valuable tools to identify intercellular infection sites, thus allowing in vivo confocal microscopic studies of the early stages of Frankia colonization. The subtilisin-like serine protease gene Dt12, as well as its Casuarina glauca homolog Cg12, are specifically expressed at sites of Frankia intercellular colonization of D. trinervis outer root tissues. This is accompanied by nucleo-cytoplasmic reorganization in the adjacent host cells and major remodeling of the intercellular apoplastic compartment. These findings lead us to propose that the actinorhizal host plays a major role in modifying both the size and composition of the intercellular apoplast in order to accommodate the filamentous microsymbiont. The implications of these findings are discussed in the light of the analogies that can be made with the orchestrating role of host legumes during intracellular root hair colonization by nitrogen-fixing rhizobia.


Subject(s)
Frankia/growth & development , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plant Cells/microbiology , Rhamnaceae/genetics , Rhamnaceae/microbiology , Subtilisins/genetics , Colony Count, Microbial , Models, Biological , Promoter Regions, Genetic/genetics , Root Nodules, Plant/cytology , Root Nodules, Plant/microbiology , Subtilisins/metabolism
11.
Insect Sci ; 24(6): 990-1002, 2017 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28421675

ABSTRACT

The acrostyle is a distinct anatomical region present on the cuticle at the inner face of the common food/salivary canal at the tip of aphid maxillary stylets. This conserved structure is of particular interest as it harbors the protein receptors of at least 1 plant virus, Cauliflower mosaic virus, and presumably has other roles in plant-insect interactions. Previously we reported immunolabeling of a highly conserved motif of cuticular proteins from the CPR family (named for the presence of a Rebers and Riddiford consensus) within the acrostyle. Here we report the development of novel tools to further study the proteomic composition of this region and to identify proteins involved in insect-virus interactions. Using a series of antibodies against cuticular proteins from the RR-2 subfamily, we identified additional peptides present within the acrostyle. Our results demonstrated that the acrostyle is a complex structure containing multiple domains of cuticular proteins accessible for interaction. In addition, an array of overlapping peptides, which covers the diversity of the majority of the RR-2 subfamily, was developed as a generic tool to characterize cuticular protein/pathogen interactions. Upon probing this array with Cucumber mosaic virus particles, consensus peptide sequences from hybridizing peptides were identified. Use of these novel tools has extended our knowledge of the proteomic composition of insect maxillary stylets and identified sequences that could be involved in virus binding, thus contributing to further elucidation of the various properties and functions of the acrostyle.


Subject(s)
Aphids/metabolism , Cucumovirus/metabolism , Insect Proteins/metabolism , Insect Vectors/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Aphids/virology , Insect Vectors/virology
12.
New Phytol ; 209(1): 86-93, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26484850

ABSTRACT

Although it is now well-established that decorated lipo-chitooligosaccharide Nod factors are the key rhizobial signals which initiate infection/nodulation in host legume species, the identity of the equivalent microbial signaling molecules in the Frankia/actinorhizal association remains elusive. With the objective of identifying Frankia symbiotic factors we present a novel approach based on both molecular and cellular pre-infection reporters expressed in the model actinorhizal species Casuarina glauca. By introducing the nuclear-localized cameleon Nup-YC2.1 into Casuarina glauca we show that cell-free culture supernatants of the compatible Frankia CcI3 strain are able to elicit sustained high frequency Ca(2+) spiking in host root hairs. Furthermore, an excellent correlation exists between the triggering of nuclear Ca(2+) spiking and the transcriptional activation of the ProCgNIN:GFP reporter as a function of the Frankia strain tested. These two pre-infection symbiotic responses have been used in combination to show that the signal molecules present in the Frankia CcI3 supernatant are hydrophilic, of low molecular weight and resistant to chitinase degradation. In conclusion, the biologically active symbiotic signals secreted by Frankia appear to be chemically distinct from the currently known chitin-based rhizobial/arbuscular mycorrhizal signaling molecules. Convenient bioassays in Casuarina glauca are now available for their full characterization.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Calcium/metabolism , Frankia/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Magnoliopsida/microbiology , Mycorrhizae/physiology , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Chitinases/metabolism , Frankia/genetics , Genes, Reporter , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Luminescent Proteins/genetics , Luminescent Proteins/metabolism , Magnoliopsida/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Root Nodulation , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/microbiology , Plants, Genetically Modified , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Symbiosis
13.
J Virol ; 89(18): 9665-75, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26178988

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: The multiplicity of cellular infection (MOI) is the number of virus genomes of a given virus species that infect individual cells. This parameter chiefly impacts the severity of within-host population bottlenecks as well as the intensity of genetic exchange, competition, and complementation among viral genotypes. Only a few formal estimations of the MOI currently are available, and most theoretical reports have considered this parameter as constant within the infected host. Nevertheless, the colonization of a multicellular host is a complex process during which the MOI may dramatically change in different organs and at different stages of the infection. We have used both qualitative and quantitative approaches to analyze the MOI during the colonization of turnip plants by Turnip mosaic virus. Remarkably, different MOIs were observed at two phases of the systemic infection of a leaf. The MOI was very low in primary infections from virus circulating within the vasculature, generally leading to primary foci founded by a single genome. Each lineage then moved from cell to cell at a very high MOI. Despite this elevated MOI during cell-to-cell progression, coinfection of cells by lineages originating in different primary foci is severely limited by the rapid onset of a mechanism inhibiting secondary infection. Thus, our results unveil an intriguing colonization pattern where individual viral genomes initiate distinct lineages within a leaf. Kin genomes then massively coinfect cells, but coinfection by two distinct lineages is strictly limited. IMPORTANCE: The MOI is the size of the viral population colonizing cells and defines major phenomena in virus evolution, like the intensity of genetic exchange and the size of within-host population bottlenecks. However, few studies have quantified the MOI, and most consider this parameter as constant during infection. Our results reveal that the MOI can depend largely on the route of cell infection in a systemically infected leaf. The MOI is usually one genome per cell when cells are infected from virus particles moving long distances in the vasculature, whereas it is much higher during subsequent cell-to-cell movement in mesophyll. However, a fast-acting superinfection exclusion prevents cell coinfection by merging populations originating from different primary foci within a leaf. This complex colonization pattern results in a situation where within-cell interactions are occurring almost exclusively among kin and explains the common but uncharacterized phenomenon of genotype spatial segregation in infected plants.


Subject(s)
Brassica rapa/virology , Genome, Viral/physiology , Plant Leaves/virology , Tymovirus/physiology , Viral Tropism , Animals , Aphids/virology , Brassica rapa/metabolism , Plant Leaves/metabolism
14.
Plant Physiol ; 167(3): 1149-57, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25627215

ABSTRACT

Actinorhizal symbioses are mutualistic interactions between plants and the soil bacteria Frankia spp. that lead to the formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules. The plant hormone auxin has been suggested to play a role in the mechanisms that control the establishment of this symbiosis in the actinorhizal tree Casuarina glauca. Here, we analyzed the role of auxin signaling in Frankia spp.-infected cells. Using a dominant-negative version of an endogenous auxin-signaling regulator, INDOLE-3-ACETIC ACID7, we established that inhibition of auxin signaling in these cells led to increased nodulation and, as a consequence, to higher nitrogen fixation per plant even if nitrogen fixation per nodule mass was similar to that in the wild type. Our results suggest that auxin signaling in Frankia spp.-infected cells is involved in the long-distance regulation of nodulation in actinorhizal symbioses.


Subject(s)
Fabaceae/cytology , Fabaceae/microbiology , Frankia/physiology , Indoleacetic Acids/metabolism , Plant Root Nodulation , Root Nodules, Plant/microbiology , Signal Transduction , Amino Acid Sequence , Cell Size , Fabaceae/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Genes, Plant , Molecular Sequence Data , Nitrogen Fixation/genetics , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Root Nodulation/genetics , Root Nodules, Plant/metabolism , Species Specificity
15.
PLoS Pathog ; 8(11): e1003009, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23133389

ABSTRACT

For any organism, population size, and fluctuations thereof, are of primary importance in determining the forces driving its evolution. This is particularly true for viruses--rapidly evolving entities that form populations with transient and explosive expansions alternating with phases of migration, resulting in strong population bottlenecks and associated founder effects that increase genetic drift. A typical illustration of this pattern is the progression of viral disease within a eukaryotic host, where such demographic fluctuations are a key factor in the emergence of new variants with altered virulence. Viruses initiate replication in one or only a few infection foci, then move through the vasculature to seed secondary infection sites and so invade distant organs and tissues. Founder effects during this within-host colonization might depend on the concentration of infectious units accumulating and circulating in the vasculature, as this represents the infection dose reaching new organs or "territories". Surprisingly, whether or not the easily measurable circulating (plasma) virus load directly drives the size of population bottlenecks during host colonization has not been documented in animal viruses, while in plants the virus load within the sap has never been estimated. Here, we address this important question by monitoring both the virus concentration flowing in host plant sap, and the number of viral genomes founding the population in each successive new leaf. Our results clearly indicate that the concentration of circulating viruses directly determines the size of bottlenecks, which hence controls founder effects and effective population size during disease progression within a host.


Subject(s)
Brassica rapa/virology , Caulimovirus/physiology , Genome, Viral/physiology , Plant Diseases/virology , Plant Leaves/virology , Viral Load/physiology , Animals , Aphids/virology
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