Effects of Mutations in the Beet Western Yellows Virus Readthrough Protein on Its Expression and Packaging and on Virus Accumulation, Symptoms, and Aphid Transmission

Virions of beet western yellows luteovirus contain a major capsid protein (P22.5) and a minor readthrough protein (P74), produced by translational readthrough of the major capsid protein sequence into the neighboring open reading frame, which encodes the readthrough domain (RTD). The RTD contains de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Virology (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 1997-04, Vol.230 (2), p.323-334
Hauptverfasser: Bruyère, A., Brault, V., Ziegler-Graff, V., Simonis, M.-T., Van den Heuvel, J.F.J.M., Richards, K., Guilley, H., Jonard, G., Herrbach, E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Virions of beet western yellows luteovirus contain a major capsid protein (P22.5) and a minor readthrough protein (P74), produced by translational readthrough of the major capsid protein sequence into the neighboring open reading frame, which encodes the readthrough domain (RTD). The RTD contains determinants required for efficient virus accumulation in agroinfected plants and for aphid transmission. The C-terminal halves of the RTD are not well conserved among luteoviruses but the N-terminal halves contain many conserved sequence motifs, including a proline-rich sequence separating the rest of the RTD from the sequence corresponding to the major coat protein. To map different biological functions to these regions, short in-frame deletions were introduced at different sites in the RTD and the mutant genomes were transmitted to protoplasts as transcripts and toNicotiana clevelandiiby agroinfection. Deletions in the nonconserved portion of the RTD did not block aphid transmission but had a moderate inhibitory effect on virus accumulation in plants and abolished symptoms. Deletion of the proline tract and the junction between the conserved and nonconserved regions inhibited readthrough protein accumulation in protoplasts by at least 10-fold. The mutants accumulated small amounts of virus in plants, did not induce symptoms, and were nontransmissible by aphids using agroinfected plants, extracts of infected protoplasts, or purified virus as a source of inoculum. Other deletions in the conserved portion of the RTD did not markedly diminish readthrough protein accumulation but abolished its incorporation into virions. These mutants accumulated to low levels in agroinfected plants and elicited symptoms, but could not be aphid-transmitted. A preliminary map has been produced mapping these functions to different parts of the RTD.
ISSN:0042-6822
1096-0341
DOI:10.1006/viro.1997.8476