Everything about Plant Virus totally explained
Plant viruses are
viruses affecting
plants.
Plant viruses, like all other viruses, are obligate intracellular
parasites that don't have the molecular machinery to replicate without the host. The plant viruses are defined as viruses pathogenic to
higher plants. While this article doesn't intend to list all plant viruses, it discusses some important viruses as well as their uses in plant
molecular biology.
Overview
Plant viruses are not nearly as well understood as the animal counterparts, this is ironic as the first virus to be discovered (see below) was the
Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV) as well as the fact that they've an estimated US$60 billion per year economic influence on crops worldwide. Plant viruses are grouped into 73
genera and 49 families.
History
The discovery of plant viruses causing
disease is often accredited to
Martinus Beijerinck who discoved, in 1898, that even after passing infective tree sap through a porcelain filter remained infectious but was sterile of
microorganisms.
After the initial discovery of the ‘viral concept’ there was need to classify any other known
viral diseases based on the mode of transmission even though
microscopic observation proved fruitless. In 1939 Holmes published a classification list of 129 plant viruses. This was expanded and in 1999 there were 977 officially recognised, and some provisional, plant virus species.
The purification of the TMV (the first purification) was first performed by
Wendell Stanley, who published his findings in 1936. He later was accredited with the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1946. In the 1950s a discovery by two labs simultaneously proved that the purified
RNA of the TMV was infectious which reinforced the argument, that had a lot of opposition at the time, that RNA was carrying
genetic information to code for the production of new infectious particles.
More recently the research has been focused on the manipulation and modification of plant virus
genomes do discover function and for commercial gain in the
agriculture business by using viral-derived sequences to provide understanding of novel forms of resistance. The recent boom in technology allowing humans to manipulate plant viruses has really helped bring the subject out of an
Aristolean science age (observation and description of the subject matter) and into the 21st century.
Structure
Viruses are very small and can only be seen under an
electron microscope. The structure of a virus is given by its coat of
proteins, which surround the viral
genome. Assembly of viral particles takes place
spontaneously.
Over 50% of known plant viruses are rod shaped (flexious or rigid). Exact length is normally dependent on the genome but it's usually between 300–500
nm with a
diameter of 15–20 nm. Protein subunits can be placed around the
circumference of a circle to form a disc. In the presence of the viral genome, the discs are stacked, then a tube is created with room for the
nucleic acid genome in the middle.
The second most common structure amongst plant viruses are
isometric particles. They are 40–50 nm in diameter. In cases when there's only a single coat protein, the basic structure consists of 60 T subunits, where T is an
integer. Some viruses may have 2 coat proteins are the formation of the particle is analogous to a
football.
There are three genera of
Geminiviridae that possess
geminate particles which are like two
isometric particles stuck together.
A very small number of plant viruses have, in addition to their coat proteins, a
lipid envelope. This is derived from the plant cell membrane as the virus particle
buds off from the
cell.
Transmission of plant viruses
Through sap
It implies direct transfer of sap by contact of and wounded plant with a healthy one. Such process occurs during agricultural practices by tools, hands, or by animal feeding on the plant. Generally TMV, potato viruses and cucumber mosaic viruses are transmitted via sap.
Insects
Plant viruses need to be transmitted by a
vector, most often
insects such as
leafhoppers. One class of viruses, the
Rhabdoviridae, have been proposed to actually be insect viruses that have evolved to
replicate in plants. The chosen insect vector of a plant virus will often be the determining factor in that virus' host range: it can only infect plants that the insect vector feeds upon. This was shown in part when the
old world white fly made it to the
USA, where it transferred many plant viruses onto new hosts.
Depending on the way they're transmitted, plant viruses are classified as non-persistent, semi-persistent and persistent. In non-persistent
transmission, viruses become attached to the distal tip of the
stylet of the insect and on the next plant it feeds on, it inoculates it with the virus. Semi-persistent viral transmission involves the virus entering the
foregut of the insect.
Those viruses that manage to pass through the gut into the
haemolymph and then to the
salivary glands are known as
persistent. There are two sub-classes of persistent viruses: propergative and circulative. Propergative viruses are able to replicate in both the plant and the insect (and may have originally been insect viruses), whereas circulative can not.
Many plant viruses encode within their genome
polypeptides with domains essential for transmission by insects. In non-persistent and semi-persistent viruses, these domains are in the coat protein and another protein known as the helper component. A bridging
hypothesis has been proposed to explain how these proteins aid in insect-mediated viral transmission. The helper component will bind to the specific domain of the coat protein, and then the insect mouthparts — creating a bridge.
In persistent propergative viruses, such as
tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV), there's often a lipid coat surrounding the proteins that isn't seen in the other classes of plant viruses. In the case of TSWV, 2 viral proteins are expressed in this lipid envelope. It has been proposed that the viruses bind via these proteins and are then taken into the insect
cell by receptor-mediated
endocytosis.
Nematodes
Soil-bourne
nematodes also have been shown to transmit viruses. They acquire and transmit them by feeding on infected
roots. Viruses can be transmitted by non-persistently and persistently, but there's no evidence of viruses being able to replicate in nematodes.
Plasmodiophorids
A number of viral genera are transmitted, both persistently and non-persistently, by soil bourne
zoosporic protozoa. These protozoa are not phytopathogenic themselves, but
parasitic. Transmission of the virus takes place when they become associated with the plant roots.
An example is
Polymyxa graminis, which has been shown to transmit a plant viral diseases in ceral crops.
Seed and pollen borne viruses
Plant virus transmission from generation to generation occurs in about 20% of plant viruses. When viruses are transmitted by seeds, the seed is infected in the generative cells and the virus is maintained in the germ cells and sometimes, but less often, in the seed coat. When the growth and development of plants is delayed because of situations like unfavourable weather, there's an increase in the amount of virus infections in seeds. There doesn't seem to be a correlation between the location of the seed on the plant and its chances of being infected.
[5] Little is known about the mechanisms involved in the transmission of plant viruses via seeds, although it's known that it's environmentally influenced and that seed transmission occurs because of a direct invasion of the embryo via the ovule or by an indirect route with an attack on the embryo mediated by infected gametes.
[5] [6] These processes can occur concurrently or separately depending on the host plant. It is unknown how the virus is able to directly invade and cross the embryo and boundary between the parental and progeny generations in the ovule.
[6]
Many plants species can be infected through seeds including but not limited to the families Leguminoseae, Solanacease, Compositae, Rosaceae, Curcurbitaceae, Gramineae.
[5]
Translation of plant viral proteins
As mentioned above, 90% of plant viruses have genomes that consist of single stranded RNA, meaning that they're in the same sense orientation as
messenger RNA. Viruses use the plant
ribosomes to produce the 4-10 proteins encoded by their genome. However, since all of the proteins are encoded on a single strand (that is, they're
ploycistronic) this will mean that the ribosome will either only produce one protein, as it'll terminate translation at the first
stop codon or that a
polyprotein will be produced. Plant viruses have had to evolve special techniques to allow the production of viral proteins by
plant cells.
5' Cap
In order for
translation to occur
eukaryotic mRNAs require a
5' Cap structure. This means that viruses must also have one. This normally consists of 7MeGpppN where N is normally
adenine or
guanine. The viruses encode a protein, normally a
replicase, with a
methyltransferase activity to allow this.
Some viruses are cap-snatchers. During this process, a
7mG-capped host mRNA is recruited by the viral transcriptase complex and subsequently cleaved by a virally encoded endonuclease. The resulting capped leader RNA is used to prime transcription on the viral genome.
However some plant viruses don't use cap, yet translate efficiently due to cap-independent translation enhancers present in 5' and 3' untranslated regions of viral mRNA
Production of sub-genomic RNAs
Some viruses use the production of
sub-genomic RNAs to ensure the translation of all proteins within their genomes. In this process the first protein encoded on the genome, and this the first to be translated, is a
replicase. This protein will act of the rest of the genome producing negative strand sub-genomic RNAs then act upon these to form positive strand sub-genomic RNAs that are essentially mRNAs ready for translation.
Segmented genomes
Some viral families, such as the
Bromoviridae instead opt to have
multi-partite genomes, genomes split between multiple viral particles. For infection to occur, the plant must be infected with all particles across the genome. For instance
Brome mosaic virus has a genome split between 3 viral particles, and all 3 particles with the different RNAs are required for
infection to take place.
Polyprotein processing
This stratergy is adopted by viral genra such as the
Potyviridae and
Tymovirus. The ribosome translates a single protein from the viral genome. Within the polyprotein is an ezyme with
proteinase function that's able cleave the polyprotein into the various single proteins or just cleave away the replicase, which can then produce sub-genomic RNAs.
Well understood plant viruses
Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) and
Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) are frequently used in plant molecular biology. Of special interest is the CaMV 35S
promoter, which is a very strong promoter most frequently used in plant
transformations.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Plant Virus'.
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