Synergistic interactions among unrelated viruses in mixed infections can cause significant yield losses, and viral determinants of these interactions are poorly understood. Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) co-infection with wheat curl mite-transmitted wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) and Triticum mosaic virus (TriMV) results in disease synergism with a drastically increased symptom phenotype of stunted growth, leaf bleaching, and enhanced titers of both viruses. In this study, we examined the viral determinants responsible for WSMV-TriMV disease synergism through transient expression of select cistrons of WSMV in wheat through TriMV and vice-versa. We found that expression of WSMV P1, NIa, or NIaPro cistrons in wheat through TriMV or vice-versa elicited moderate to severe symptoms with a moderate or no increase in virus titer. However, co-expression of P1 and NIaPro cistrons of WSMV in wheat through TriMV or vice-versa exhibited a WSMV-TriMV disease synergism-like phenotype. Additionally, we found that the P3 cistron of both viruses is dispensable for synergism, whereas HCPro and NIaVPg cistrons of WSMV and TriMV are not the primary determinants but might have a minor role in efficient synergism. In co-infected wheat, accumulation of vsiRNAs was increased, similar to viral genomic RNA copies, despite the presence of dual viral RNA silencing suppressors (VRSS), which function through sequestration of vsiRNAs. Our findings revealed that WSMV-TriMV disease synergism is not caused by the suppression of host post-transcriptional gene silencing by dual VRSS in co-infected wheat and the P1 and NIaPro cistrons of both viruses collectively drive synergistic interactions between WSMV and TriMV in wheat.
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