Cargando…

Diverse Begomoviruses Evolutionarily Hijack Plant Terpenoid-Based Defense to Promote Whitefly Performance

Arthropod-borne pathogens and parasites are major threats to human health and global agriculture. They may directly or indirectly manipulate behaviors of arthropod vector for rapid transmission between hosts. The largest genus of plant viruses, Begomovirus, is transmitted exclusively by whitefly (Be...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wang, Ning, Zhao, Pingzhi, Wang, Duan, Mubin, Muhammad, Fang, Rongxiang, Ye, Jian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9818243/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36611943
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12010149
_version_ 1784864937374384128
author Wang, Ning
Zhao, Pingzhi
Wang, Duan
Mubin, Muhammad
Fang, Rongxiang
Ye, Jian
author_facet Wang, Ning
Zhao, Pingzhi
Wang, Duan
Mubin, Muhammad
Fang, Rongxiang
Ye, Jian
author_sort Wang, Ning
collection PubMed
description Arthropod-borne pathogens and parasites are major threats to human health and global agriculture. They may directly or indirectly manipulate behaviors of arthropod vector for rapid transmission between hosts. The largest genus of plant viruses, Begomovirus, is transmitted exclusively by whitefly (Bemisia tabaci), a complex of at least 34 morphologically indistinguishable species. We have previously shown that plants infected with the tomato yellowleaf curl China virus (TYLCCNV) and its associated betasatellite (TYLCCNB) attract their whitefly vectors by subverting plant MYC2-regulated terpenoid biosynthesis, therefore forming an indirect mutualism between virus and vector via plant. However, the evolutionary mechanism of interactions between begomoviruses and their whitefly vectors is still poorly understood. Here we present evidence to suggest that indirect mutualism may happen over a millennium ago and at present extensively prevails. Detailed bioinformatics and functional analysis identified the serine-33 as an evolutionary conserved phosphorylation site in 105 of 119 Betasatellite species-encoded βC1 proteins, which are responsible for suppressing plant terpenoid-based defense by interfering with MYC2 dimerization and are essential to promote whitefly performance. The substitution of serine-33 of βC1 proteins with either aspartate (phosphorylation mimic mutants) or cysteine, the amino acid in the non-functional sβC1 encoded by Siegesbeckia yellow vein betasatellite SiYVB) impaired the ability of βC1 functions on suppression of MYC2 dimerization, whitefly attraction and fitness. Moreover the gain of function mutation of cysteine-31 to serine in sβC1 protein of SiYVB restored these functions of βC1 protein. Thus, the dynamic phosphorylation of serine-33 in βC1 proteins helps the virus to evade host defense against insect vectors with an evolutionarily conserved manner. Our data provide a mechanistic explanation of how arboviruses evolutionarily modulate host defenses for rapid transmission.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9818243
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-98182432023-01-07 Diverse Begomoviruses Evolutionarily Hijack Plant Terpenoid-Based Defense to Promote Whitefly Performance Wang, Ning Zhao, Pingzhi Wang, Duan Mubin, Muhammad Fang, Rongxiang Ye, Jian Cells Article Arthropod-borne pathogens and parasites are major threats to human health and global agriculture. They may directly or indirectly manipulate behaviors of arthropod vector for rapid transmission between hosts. The largest genus of plant viruses, Begomovirus, is transmitted exclusively by whitefly (Bemisia tabaci), a complex of at least 34 morphologically indistinguishable species. We have previously shown that plants infected with the tomato yellowleaf curl China virus (TYLCCNV) and its associated betasatellite (TYLCCNB) attract their whitefly vectors by subverting plant MYC2-regulated terpenoid biosynthesis, therefore forming an indirect mutualism between virus and vector via plant. However, the evolutionary mechanism of interactions between begomoviruses and their whitefly vectors is still poorly understood. Here we present evidence to suggest that indirect mutualism may happen over a millennium ago and at present extensively prevails. Detailed bioinformatics and functional analysis identified the serine-33 as an evolutionary conserved phosphorylation site in 105 of 119 Betasatellite species-encoded βC1 proteins, which are responsible for suppressing plant terpenoid-based defense by interfering with MYC2 dimerization and are essential to promote whitefly performance. The substitution of serine-33 of βC1 proteins with either aspartate (phosphorylation mimic mutants) or cysteine, the amino acid in the non-functional sβC1 encoded by Siegesbeckia yellow vein betasatellite SiYVB) impaired the ability of βC1 functions on suppression of MYC2 dimerization, whitefly attraction and fitness. Moreover the gain of function mutation of cysteine-31 to serine in sβC1 protein of SiYVB restored these functions of βC1 protein. Thus, the dynamic phosphorylation of serine-33 in βC1 proteins helps the virus to evade host defense against insect vectors with an evolutionarily conserved manner. Our data provide a mechanistic explanation of how arboviruses evolutionarily modulate host defenses for rapid transmission. MDPI 2022-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9818243/ /pubmed/36611943 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12010149 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wang, Ning
Zhao, Pingzhi
Wang, Duan
Mubin, Muhammad
Fang, Rongxiang
Ye, Jian
Diverse Begomoviruses Evolutionarily Hijack Plant Terpenoid-Based Defense to Promote Whitefly Performance
title Diverse Begomoviruses Evolutionarily Hijack Plant Terpenoid-Based Defense to Promote Whitefly Performance
title_full Diverse Begomoviruses Evolutionarily Hijack Plant Terpenoid-Based Defense to Promote Whitefly Performance
title_fullStr Diverse Begomoviruses Evolutionarily Hijack Plant Terpenoid-Based Defense to Promote Whitefly Performance
title_full_unstemmed Diverse Begomoviruses Evolutionarily Hijack Plant Terpenoid-Based Defense to Promote Whitefly Performance
title_short Diverse Begomoviruses Evolutionarily Hijack Plant Terpenoid-Based Defense to Promote Whitefly Performance
title_sort diverse begomoviruses evolutionarily hijack plant terpenoid-based defense to promote whitefly performance
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9818243/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36611943
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12010149
work_keys_str_mv AT wangning diversebegomovirusesevolutionarilyhijackplantterpenoidbaseddefensetopromotewhiteflyperformance
AT zhaopingzhi diversebegomovirusesevolutionarilyhijackplantterpenoidbaseddefensetopromotewhiteflyperformance
AT wangduan diversebegomovirusesevolutionarilyhijackplantterpenoidbaseddefensetopromotewhiteflyperformance
AT mubinmuhammad diversebegomovirusesevolutionarilyhijackplantterpenoidbaseddefensetopromotewhiteflyperformance
AT fangrongxiang diversebegomovirusesevolutionarilyhijackplantterpenoidbaseddefensetopromotewhiteflyperformance
AT yejian diversebegomovirusesevolutionarilyhijackplantterpenoidbaseddefensetopromotewhiteflyperformance