Literature DB >> 16055678

The potato virus X TGBp2 movement protein associates with endoplasmic reticulum-derived vesicles during virus infection.

Ho-Jong Ju1, Timmy D Samuels, Yuh-Shuh Wang, Elison Blancaflor, Mark Payton, Ruchira Mitra, Konduru Krishnamurthy, Richard S Nelson, Jeanmarie Verchot-Lubicz.   

Abstract

The green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene was fused to the potato virus X (PVX) TGBp2 gene, inserted into either the PVX infectious clone or pRTL2 plasmids, and used to study protein subcellular targeting. In protoplasts and plants inoculated with PVX-GFP:TGBp2 or transfected with pRTL2-GFP:TGBp2, fluorescence was mainly in vesicles and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). During late stages of virus infection, fluorescence became increasingly cytosolic and nuclear. Protoplasts transfected with PVX-GFP:TGBp2 or pRTL2-GFP:TGBp2 were treated with cycloheximide and the decline of GFP fluorescence was greater in virus-infected protoplasts than in pRTL2-GFP:TGBp2-transfected protoplasts. Thus, protein instability is enhanced in virus-infected protoplasts, which may account for the cytosolic and nuclear fluorescence during late stages of infection. Immunogold labeling and electron microscopy were used to further characterize the GFP:TGBp2-induced vesicles. Label was associated with the ER and vesicles, but not the Golgi apparatus. The TGBp2-induced vesicles appeared to be ER derived. For comparison, plasmids expressing GFP fused to TGBp3 were transfected to protoplasts, bombarded to tobacco leaves, and studied in transgenic leaves. The GFP:TGBp3 proteins were associated mainly with the ER and did not cause obvious changes in the endomembrane architecture, suggesting that the vesicles reported in GFP:TGBp2 studies were induced by the PVX TGBp2 protein. In double-labeling studies using confocal microscopy, fluorescence was associated with actin filaments, but not with Golgi vesicles. We propose a model in which reorganization of the ER and increased protein degradation is linked to plasmodesmata gating.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16055678      PMCID: PMC1183379          DOI: 10.1104/pp.105.066019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Physiol        ISSN: 0032-0889            Impact factor:   8.340


  69 in total

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  49 in total

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3.  The tobacco mosaic virus 126-kilodalton protein, a constituent of the virus replication complex, alone or within the complex aligns with and traffics along microfilaments.

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Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2005-07-22       Impact factor: 8.340

4.  Mutations in the central domain of potato virus X TGBp2 eliminate granular vesicles and virus cell-to-cell trafficking.

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9.  Grain setting defect1, encoding a remorin protein, affects the grain setting in rice through regulating plasmodesmatal conductance.

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10.  Specificity of Plant Rhabdovirus Cell-to-Cell Movement.

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