Abstract

The NSs protein of Watermelon silver mottle virus (WSMoV) is the RNA silencing suppressor and pathogenicity determinant. In this study, serial deletion and point-mutation mutagenesis of conserved regions (CR) of NSs protein were performed, and the silencing suppression function was analyzed through agroinfiltration in Nicotiana benthamiana plants. We found two amino acid (aa) residues, H113 and Y398, are novel functional residues for RNA silencing suppression. Our further analyses demonstrated that H113 at the common epitope (CE) (109KFTMHNQ117), which is highly conserved in Asia type tospoviruses, and the benzene ring of Y398 at the C-terminal β-sheet motif (397IYFL400) affect NSs mRNA stability and protein stability, respectively, and are thus critical for NSs RNA silencing suppression. Additionally, protein expression of other six deleted (ΔCR1-ΔCR6) and five point-mutated (Y15A, Y27A, G180A, R181A and R212A) mutants were hampered and their silencing suppression ability was abolished. The accumulation of the mutant mRNAs and proteins, except Y398A, could be rescued or enhanced by co-infiltration with potyviral suppressor HC-Pro. When assayed with the attenuated Zucchini yellow mosaic virus vector in squash plants, the recombinants carrying individual seven point-mutated NSs proteins displayed symptoms much milder than the recombinant carrying the wild type NSs protein, suggesting that these aa residues also affect viral pathogenicity by suppressing the host silencing mechanism.

Highlights

  • In plants, post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) is an important defense mechanism at RNA level against pathogens

  • Alignment of the NSs proteins of 16 Asia type and Euro-America type tospovirus species revealed eleven highly conserved individual amino acids, G16, D25, Y27, K109, H113, G180, K199, R212, I342, Y398 and T403, which are present in the CR1-6 or common epitope (CE) (Fig 1B)

  • Our results showed that the accumulation of the mRNAs and proteins of ΔCR1- ΔCR6 and ΔCE could be rescued by HC-Pro, suggesting that the loss of RNA silencing suppressor (RSS) function of all deleted proteins is due to RNA silencing

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Summary

Introduction

Post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) is an important defense mechanism at RNA level against pathogens. The replicative dsRNA intermediates or viral RNAs-induced dsRNAs, synthesized by RNA-dependent RNA polymerase 6 (RDR6) [1] and suppressor of gene silencing 3 (SGS3) [2,3,4], trigger PTGS in host cells [5,6]. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0126161 May 20, 2015

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