| Literature DB >> 32898938 |
Liangliang Jiang1,2, Yuwen Lu2,3, Xiyin Zheng4, Xue Yang5, Ying Chen5, Tianhao Zhang2, Xing Zhao5, Shu Wang6, Xia Zhao1, Xijiao Song7, Xiangxiang Zhang2, Jiejun Peng2,3, Hongying Zheng2,3, Lin Lin2,3, Stuart MacFarlane8, Yule Liu4, Jianping Chen1,2,3, Fei Yan2,3.
Abstract
In plants, autophagy is involved in responses to viral infection. However, the role of host factors in mediating autophagy to suppress viruses is poorly understood. A previously uncharacterized plant protein, NbP3IP, was shown to interact with p3, an RNA-silencing suppressor protein encoded by Rice stripe virus (RSV), a negative-strand RNA virus. The potential roles of NbP3IP in RSV infection were examined. NbP3IP degraded p3 through the autophagy pathway, thereby affecting the silencing suppression activity of p3. Transgenic overexpression of NbP3IP conferred resistance to RSV infection in Nicotiana benthamiana. RSV infection was promoted in ATG5- or ATG7-silenced plants and was inhibited in GAPC-silenced plants where autophagy was activated, confirming the role of autophagy in suppressing RSV infection. NbP3IP interacted with NbATG8f, indicating a potential selective autophagosomal cargo receptor role for P3IP. Additionally, the rice NbP3IP homolog (OsP3IP) also mediated p3 degradation and interacted with OsATG8b and p3. Through identification of the involvement of P3IP in the autophagy-mediated degradation of RSV p3, we reveal a new mechanism to antagonize the infection of RSV, and thereby provide the first evidence that autophagy can play an antiviral role against negative-strand RNA viruses.Entities:
Keywords: ATG8; P3IP; Rice stripe virus (RSV); autophagy; p3
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32898938 DOI: 10.1111/nph.16917
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151