Abstract

Many persistent transmitted plant viruses, including rice stripe virus (RSV), cause serious damage to crop production worldwide. Although many reports have indicated that a successful insect-mediated virus transmission depends on a proper interaction between the virus and its insect vector, the mechanism(s) controlling this interaction remained poorly understood. In this study, we used RSV and its small brown planthopper (SBPH) vector as a working model to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying the entrance of RSV virions into SBPH midgut cells for virus circulative and propagative transmission. We have determined that this non-enveloped tenuivirus uses its non-structural glycoprotein NSvc2 as a helper component to overcome the midgut barrier(s) for RSV replication and transmission. In the absence of this glycoprotein, purified RSV virions were unable to enter SBPH midgut cells. In the RSV-infected cells, this glycoprotein was processed into two mature proteins: an amino-terminal protein (NSvc2-N) and a carboxyl-terminal protein (NSvc2-C). Both NSvc2-N and NSvc2-C interact with RSV virions. Our results showed that the NSvc2-N could bind directly to the surface of midgut lumen via its N-glycosylation sites. Upon recognition, the midgut cells underwent endocytosis followed by compartmentalization of RSV virions and NSvc2 into early and then late endosomes. The NSvc2-C triggered cell membrane fusion via its highly conserved fusion loop motifs under the acidic condition inside the late endosomes, leading to the release of RSV virions from endosomes into cytosol. In summary, our results showed for the first time that a rice tenuivirus utilized its glycoprotein NSvc2 as a helper component to ensure a proper interaction between its virions and SBPH midgut cells for its circulative and propagative transmission.

Highlights

  • Arthropod insects play critical roles in epidemics of numerous animal and plant viruses [1,2,3]

  • Understanding how plant viruses interact with their insect vectors during virus transmission is a key step towards the successful management of plant viruses worldwide

  • We demonstrated that the circulative and propagative transmitted rice stripe virus (RSV) utilized its glycoprotein NSvc2 as a helper component to ensure a specific interaction between its virions and small brown planthopper (SBPH) midgut cells to overcome the midgut barriers inside this vector

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Summary

Introduction

Arthropod insects play critical roles in epidemics of numerous animal and plant viruses [1,2,3]. For non-persistent or semi-persistent transmissions, plant viruses are retained inside insect stylets from a few minutes to several hours or on insect foregut surface for a few hours to several days. The persistent transmitted plant viruses (non-propagative or propagative) can enter insect vector bodies, and circulate and/or replicate inside the vectors for several days to weeks [10]. These persistent transmitted viruses need to pass insect midgut barrier(s), dissemination barrier(s), and salivary gland barrier(s) prior to be transmitted to new host plants [6, 11, 12]. The mechanism(s) controlling the interactions between viruses and their insect vector midgut barrier(s) are poorly understood

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