Cargando…

The Interaction Dynamics of Two Potato Leafroll Virus Movement Proteins Affects Their Localization to the Outer Membranes of Mitochondria and Plastids

The Luteoviridae is an agriculturally important family of viruses whose replication and transport are restricted to plant phloem. Their genomes encode for four proteins that regulate viral movement. These include two structural proteins that make up the capsid and two non-structural proteins known a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: DeBlasio, Stacy L., Xu, Yi, Johnson, Richard S., Rebelo, Ana Rita, MacCoss, Michael J., Gray, Stewart M., Heck, Michelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6265731/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30373157
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v10110585
_version_ 1783375685674336256
author DeBlasio, Stacy L.
Xu, Yi
Johnson, Richard S.
Rebelo, Ana Rita
MacCoss, Michael J.
Gray, Stewart M.
Heck, Michelle
author_facet DeBlasio, Stacy L.
Xu, Yi
Johnson, Richard S.
Rebelo, Ana Rita
MacCoss, Michael J.
Gray, Stewart M.
Heck, Michelle
author_sort DeBlasio, Stacy L.
collection PubMed
description The Luteoviridae is an agriculturally important family of viruses whose replication and transport are restricted to plant phloem. Their genomes encode for four proteins that regulate viral movement. These include two structural proteins that make up the capsid and two non-structural proteins known as P3a and P17. Little is known about how these proteins interact with each other and the host to coordinate virus movement within and between cells. We used quantitative, affinity purification-mass spectrometry to show that the P3a protein of Potato leafroll virus complexes with virus and that this interaction is partially dependent on P17. Bimolecular complementation assays (BiFC) were used to validate that P3a and P17 self-interact as well as directly interact with each other. Co-localization with fluorescent-based organelle markers demonstrates that P3a directs P17 to the mitochondrial outer membrane while P17 regulates the localization of the P3a-P17 heterodimer to plastids. Residues in the C-terminus of P3a were shown to regulate P3a association with host mitochondria by using mutational analysis and also varying BiFC tag orientation. Collectively, our work reveals that the PLRV movement proteins play a game of intracellular hopscotch along host organelles to transport the virus to the cell periphery.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6265731
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-62657312018-12-07 The Interaction Dynamics of Two Potato Leafroll Virus Movement Proteins Affects Their Localization to the Outer Membranes of Mitochondria and Plastids DeBlasio, Stacy L. Xu, Yi Johnson, Richard S. Rebelo, Ana Rita MacCoss, Michael J. Gray, Stewart M. Heck, Michelle Viruses Article The Luteoviridae is an agriculturally important family of viruses whose replication and transport are restricted to plant phloem. Their genomes encode for four proteins that regulate viral movement. These include two structural proteins that make up the capsid and two non-structural proteins known as P3a and P17. Little is known about how these proteins interact with each other and the host to coordinate virus movement within and between cells. We used quantitative, affinity purification-mass spectrometry to show that the P3a protein of Potato leafroll virus complexes with virus and that this interaction is partially dependent on P17. Bimolecular complementation assays (BiFC) were used to validate that P3a and P17 self-interact as well as directly interact with each other. Co-localization with fluorescent-based organelle markers demonstrates that P3a directs P17 to the mitochondrial outer membrane while P17 regulates the localization of the P3a-P17 heterodimer to plastids. Residues in the C-terminus of P3a were shown to regulate P3a association with host mitochondria by using mutational analysis and also varying BiFC tag orientation. Collectively, our work reveals that the PLRV movement proteins play a game of intracellular hopscotch along host organelles to transport the virus to the cell periphery. MDPI 2018-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6265731/ /pubmed/30373157 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v10110585 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
DeBlasio, Stacy L.
Xu, Yi
Johnson, Richard S.
Rebelo, Ana Rita
MacCoss, Michael J.
Gray, Stewart M.
Heck, Michelle
The Interaction Dynamics of Two Potato Leafroll Virus Movement Proteins Affects Their Localization to the Outer Membranes of Mitochondria and Plastids
title The Interaction Dynamics of Two Potato Leafroll Virus Movement Proteins Affects Their Localization to the Outer Membranes of Mitochondria and Plastids
title_full The Interaction Dynamics of Two Potato Leafroll Virus Movement Proteins Affects Their Localization to the Outer Membranes of Mitochondria and Plastids
title_fullStr The Interaction Dynamics of Two Potato Leafroll Virus Movement Proteins Affects Their Localization to the Outer Membranes of Mitochondria and Plastids
title_full_unstemmed The Interaction Dynamics of Two Potato Leafroll Virus Movement Proteins Affects Their Localization to the Outer Membranes of Mitochondria and Plastids
title_short The Interaction Dynamics of Two Potato Leafroll Virus Movement Proteins Affects Their Localization to the Outer Membranes of Mitochondria and Plastids
title_sort interaction dynamics of two potato leafroll virus movement proteins affects their localization to the outer membranes of mitochondria and plastids
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6265731/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30373157
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v10110585
work_keys_str_mv AT deblasiostacyl theinteractiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT xuyi theinteractiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT johnsonrichards theinteractiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT rebeloanarita theinteractiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT maccossmichaelj theinteractiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT graystewartm theinteractiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT heckmichelle theinteractiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT deblasiostacyl interactiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT xuyi interactiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT johnsonrichards interactiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT rebeloanarita interactiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT maccossmichaelj interactiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT graystewartm interactiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids
AT heckmichelle interactiondynamicsoftwopotatoleafrollvirusmovementproteinsaffectstheirlocalizationtotheoutermembranesofmitochondriaandplastids