Abstract

Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) encodes a 520 aa polypeptide, P6, which participates in several essential activities in the virus life cycle including suppressing RNA silencing and salicylic acid-responsive defence signalling. We infected Arabidopsis with CaMV mutants containing short in-frame deletions within the P6 ORF. A deletion in the distal end of domain D-I (the N-terminal 112 aa) of P6 did not affect virus replication but compromised symptom development and curtailed the ability to restore GFP fluorescence in a GFP-silenced transgenic Arabidopsis line. A deletion in the minimum transactivator domain was defective in virus replication but retained the capacity to suppress RNA silencing locally. Symptom expression in CaMV-infected plants is apparently linked to the ability to suppress RNA silencing. When transiently co-expressed with tomato bushy stunt virus P19, an elicitor of programmed cell death in Nicotiana tabacum, WT P6 suppressed the hypersensitive response, but three mutants, two with deletions within the distal end of domain D-I and one involving the N-terminal nuclear export signal (NES), were unable to do so. Deleting the N-terminal 20 aa also abolished the suppression of pathogen-associated molecular pattern-dependent PR1a expression following agroinfiltration. However, the two other deletions in domain D-I retained this activity, evidence that the mechanisms underlying these functions are not identical. The D-I domain of P6 when expressed alone failed to suppress either cell death or PR1a expression and is therefore necessary but not sufficient for all three defence suppression activities. Consequently, concerns about the biosafety of genetically modified crops carrying truncated ORFVI sequences appear unfounded.

Highlights

  • Members of the family Caulimoviridae of pararetroviruses infect plants and replicate by reverse transcription of a circular dsDNA genome (Haas et al, 2002)

  • Agroinoculation with Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV)-CW was remarkably efficient, with symptoms appearing at ~13 days post-infection (p.i.) and essentially 100 % of plants developing obvious stunting, leaf distortion and mosaics by 28 days p.i

  • Col-0 plants inoculated with CaMVCW contained high titres of virus, but CaMV-TAVD2 and CaMV-TAVD6 were not detectable by ELISA

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Summary

Introduction

Members of the family Caulimoviridae of pararetroviruses infect plants and replicate by reverse transcription of a circular dsDNA genome (Haas et al, 2002). The family contains six known genera of which the most extensively studied member is cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV), the type member of the genus Caulimovirus. CaMV has a genome of ~8 kb comprising six major ORFs (I–VI). Five of the six major virus proteins are translated sequentially from a single polycistronic RNA, the 35S RNA (Ryabova et al, 2002, 2004). This unusual translational strategy is found in members of only two genera of viruses, Caulimovirus and the closely related Soymovirus (Ryabova et al, 2002, 2006)

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