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Contribution of Host Intracellular Transport Machineries to Intercellular Movement of Turnip Mosaic Virus

The contribution of different host cell transport systems in the intercellular movement of turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) was investigated. To discriminate between primary infections and secondary infections associated with the virus intercellular movement, a gene cassette expressing GFP-HDEL was insert...

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Autores principales: Agbeci, Maxime, Grangeon, Romain, Nelson, Richard S., Zheng, Huanquan, Laliberté, Jean-François
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3789768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24098128
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003683
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author Agbeci, Maxime
Grangeon, Romain
Nelson, Richard S.
Zheng, Huanquan
Laliberté, Jean-François
author_facet Agbeci, Maxime
Grangeon, Romain
Nelson, Richard S.
Zheng, Huanquan
Laliberté, Jean-François
author_sort Agbeci, Maxime
collection PubMed
description The contribution of different host cell transport systems in the intercellular movement of turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) was investigated. To discriminate between primary infections and secondary infections associated with the virus intercellular movement, a gene cassette expressing GFP-HDEL was inserted adjacent to a TuMV infectious cassette expressing 6K(2):mCherry, both within the T-DNA borders of the binary vector pCambia. In this system, both gene cassettes were delivered to the same cell by a single binary vector and primary infection foci emitted green and red fluorescence while secondarily infected cells emitted only red fluorescence. Intercellular movement was measured at 72 hours post infiltration and was estimated to proceed at an average rate of one cell being infected every three hours over an observation period of 17 hours. To determine if the secretory pathway were important for TuMV intercellular movement, chemical and protein inhibitors that blocked both early and late secretory pathways were used. Treatment with Brefeldin A or Concanamycin A or expression of ARF1 or RAB-E1d dominant negative mutants, all of which inhibit pre- or post-Golgi transport, reduced intercellular movement by the virus. These treatments, however, did not inhibit virus replication in primary infected cells. Pharmacological interference assays using Tyrphostin A23 or Wortmannin showed that endocytosis was not important for TuMV intercellular movement. Lack of co-localization by endocytosed FM4-64 and Ara7 (AtRabF2b) with TuMV-induced 6K(2)-tagged vesicles further supported this conclusion. Microfilament depolymerizing drugs and silencing expression of myosin XI-2 gene, but not myosin VIII genes, also inhibited TuMV intercellular movement. Expression of dominant negative myosin mutants confirmed the role played by myosin XI-2 as well as by myosin XI-K in TuMV intercellular movement. Using this dual gene cassette expression system and transport inhibitors, components of the secretory and actomyosin machinery were shown to be important for TuMV intercellular spread.
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spelling pubmed-37897682013-10-04 Contribution of Host Intracellular Transport Machineries to Intercellular Movement of Turnip Mosaic Virus Agbeci, Maxime Grangeon, Romain Nelson, Richard S. Zheng, Huanquan Laliberté, Jean-François PLoS Pathog Research Article The contribution of different host cell transport systems in the intercellular movement of turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) was investigated. To discriminate between primary infections and secondary infections associated with the virus intercellular movement, a gene cassette expressing GFP-HDEL was inserted adjacent to a TuMV infectious cassette expressing 6K(2):mCherry, both within the T-DNA borders of the binary vector pCambia. In this system, both gene cassettes were delivered to the same cell by a single binary vector and primary infection foci emitted green and red fluorescence while secondarily infected cells emitted only red fluorescence. Intercellular movement was measured at 72 hours post infiltration and was estimated to proceed at an average rate of one cell being infected every three hours over an observation period of 17 hours. To determine if the secretory pathway were important for TuMV intercellular movement, chemical and protein inhibitors that blocked both early and late secretory pathways were used. Treatment with Brefeldin A or Concanamycin A or expression of ARF1 or RAB-E1d dominant negative mutants, all of which inhibit pre- or post-Golgi transport, reduced intercellular movement by the virus. These treatments, however, did not inhibit virus replication in primary infected cells. Pharmacological interference assays using Tyrphostin A23 or Wortmannin showed that endocytosis was not important for TuMV intercellular movement. Lack of co-localization by endocytosed FM4-64 and Ara7 (AtRabF2b) with TuMV-induced 6K(2)-tagged vesicles further supported this conclusion. Microfilament depolymerizing drugs and silencing expression of myosin XI-2 gene, but not myosin VIII genes, also inhibited TuMV intercellular movement. Expression of dominant negative myosin mutants confirmed the role played by myosin XI-2 as well as by myosin XI-K in TuMV intercellular movement. Using this dual gene cassette expression system and transport inhibitors, components of the secretory and actomyosin machinery were shown to be important for TuMV intercellular spread. Public Library of Science 2013-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3789768/ /pubmed/24098128 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003683 Text en © 2013 Agbeci et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Agbeci, Maxime
Grangeon, Romain
Nelson, Richard S.
Zheng, Huanquan
Laliberté, Jean-François
Contribution of Host Intracellular Transport Machineries to Intercellular Movement of Turnip Mosaic Virus
title Contribution of Host Intracellular Transport Machineries to Intercellular Movement of Turnip Mosaic Virus
title_full Contribution of Host Intracellular Transport Machineries to Intercellular Movement of Turnip Mosaic Virus
title_fullStr Contribution of Host Intracellular Transport Machineries to Intercellular Movement of Turnip Mosaic Virus
title_full_unstemmed Contribution of Host Intracellular Transport Machineries to Intercellular Movement of Turnip Mosaic Virus
title_short Contribution of Host Intracellular Transport Machineries to Intercellular Movement of Turnip Mosaic Virus
title_sort contribution of host intracellular transport machineries to intercellular movement of turnip mosaic virus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3789768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24098128
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003683
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