Abstract
Citrus leprosis virus C (CiLV-C, genus Cilevirus, family Kitaviridae) is an atypical virus that does not spread systemically in its plant hosts. Upon its inoculation by Brevipalpus mites, only localized lesions occur, and the infection remains limited to cells around mite feeding sites. Here, we aimed to gain insights into the putative causes of viral unfitness in plants by expanding the limited knowledge of the molecular mechanisms underlying plant/kitavirid interactions. Firstly, we quantified the CiLV-C viral RNAs during the infection in Arabidopsis thaliana plants using RT-qPCR and systematized it by defining three stages of distinguishing subgenomic and genomic RNA accumulation: i) 0–24 h after infestation, ii) 2–4 days after infestation (dai), and iii) 6–10 dai. Accordingly, the global plant response to CiLV-C infection was assessed by RNA-Seq at each period. Results indicated a progressive reprogramming of the plant transcriptome in parallel to the increasing viral loads. Gene ontology enrichment analysis revealed the induction of cell growth-related processes at the early stages of the infection and the triggering of the SA-mediated pathway, ROS burst and hypersensitive response (HR) at the presymptomatic stage. Conversely, infected plants downregulated JA/ET-mediated pathways and processes involved in the primary metabolism including photosynthesis. Marker genes of unfolded protein response were also induced, suggesting a contribution of the endoplasmic reticulum stress to the cell death caused by the viral infection. Finally, we transiently expressed CiLV-C proteins in Nicotiana benthamiana plants to undertake their roles in the elicited plant responses. Expression of the CiLV-C P61 protein consistently triggered ROS burst, upregulated SA- and HR-related genes, increased SA levels, reduced JA levels, and caused cell death. Mimicry of responses typically observed during CiLV-C–plant interaction indicates P61 as a putative viral effector causing the HR-like symptoms associated with the infection. Our data strengthen the hypothesis that symptoms of CiLV-C infection might be the outcome of a hypersensitive-like response during an incompatible interaction. Consequently, the locally restricted infection of CiLV-C, commonly observed across infections by kitavirids, supports the thesis that these viruses, likely arising from an ancestral arthropod-infecting virus, are unable to fully circumvent plant defenses.
Highlights
Viruses that accomplish plant systemic infections replicate in the entry cell and use it as the source for local infections in contiguous cells, invade, and spread throughout the plant via the vascular system
The targets for TaqMan-based assays were two regions of the CiLV-C RNA1, one within the gene p29, which is present in the genomic and sgRNA and codes for the putative capsid protein, and another inside the ORF RdRp that is directly translated from the genomic RNA and codes for the viral replicase
CiLV-C RNA loads were quantified during a time-course experiment in which leaf samples from A. thaliana plants were collected at 1⁄4, 1⁄2, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 days after infestation with viruliferous B. yothersi mites
Summary
Viruses that accomplish plant systemic infections replicate in the entry cell and use it as the source for local infections in contiguous cells, invade, and spread throughout the plant via the vascular system. From the majority of plant viruses, citrus leprosis virus C (CiLV-C, genus Cilevirus, family Kitaviridae) is unable to systemically infect any of its natural or experimental host species, even those belonging to distant plant families (Nunes et al, 2012; Arena et al, 2013; Garita et al, 2014). Despite the constraint in systemic infection for CiLV-C, it causes citrus leprosis, the most important viral disease affecting the citrus industry in Brazil, the world leader in sweet orange production. Prevention and control of citrus leprosis cost approximately 50 million dollars, mainly for the chemical control of the viral vector, mites of the species Brevipalpus yothersi (Bassanezi et al, 2019). Endemic in the Americas, CiLV-C has spread throughout the main citrus-producing areas of the Latin American subregion (Ramos-González et al, 2018)
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