Autophagy plays a paramount role in mammalian antiviral immunity including direct targeting of viruses and their individual components, and many viruses have evolved measures to antagonize or even exploit autophagy mechanisms for the benefit of infection. In plants, however, the functions of autophagy in host immunity and viral pathogenesis are poorly understood. In this study, we have identified both anti-and proviral roles of autophagy in the compatible interaction of cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV), a double-stranded DNA pararetrovirus, with the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. We show that the autophagy cargo receptor NEIGHBOR OF BRCA1 (NBR1) targets nonassembled and virus particle-forming capsid proteins to mediate their autophagy-dependent degradation, thereby restricting the establishment of CaMV infection. Intriguingly, the CaMV-induced virus factory inclusions seem to protect against autophagic destruction by sequestering capsid proteins and coordinating particle assembly and storage. In addition, we found that virus-triggered autophagy prevents extensive senescence and tissue death of infected plants in a largely NBR1-independent manner. This survival function significantly extends the timespan of virus production, thereby increasing the chances for virus particle acquisition by aphid vectors and CaMV transmission. Together, our results provide evidence for the integration of selective autophagy into plant immunity against viruses and reveal potential viral strategies to evade and adapt autophagic processes for successful pathogenesis. A utophagy is a conserved intracellular pathway that engages specialized double-membrane vesicles, called "autophagosomes," to enclose and transport cytoplasmic content to lytic compartments for degradation and subsequent recycling (1). Autophagosome formation relies on extensive membrane rearrangements and is mediated by the concerted action of a core set of autophagy-related proteins (ATGs) (2, 3). At basal levels, autophagy serves mainly housekeeping functions in cellular homeostasis, whereas stimulated autophagy activity facilitates adaptation to developmental and environmental stress conditions including starvation, aging, and pathogen infection (1, 4). Ample evidence now indicates that autophagy, initially recognized as a mainly bulk catabolic process, is able specifically to target and degrade a multitude of cellular structures ranging from individual and aggregated proteins to entire organelles and invading microbes (5, 6). Selectivity is provided by a growing number of autophagic adaptor or receptor proteins identified in eukaryotic organisms that recruit the cargo to the developing autophagosome through interaction with membrane-associated ATG8/LC3 proteins (7, 8). Several mammalian autophagy receptors have been implicated in the targeting of intracellular bacterial and viral pathogens in a process called "xenophagy" (8-10). For instance, the cargo receptor p62 (SQSTM1) was shown to bind directly to and mediate autophagic clearance of different viral capsid pr...
We analyzed expression of marker genes for three defense pathways during infection by Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV), a compatible pathogen of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), using luciferase reporter transgenes and directly by measuring transcript abundance. Expression of PR-1, a marker for salicylic acid signaling, was very low until 8 d postinoculation and then rose sharply, coinciding with the rise in virus levels. In contrast, as early as 2 h postinoculation, transcriptional up-regulation of GST1-a marker for reactive oxygen species-and PDF1.2-a marker for jasmonic acid/ethylene defense signaling-was detectable in the virus-inoculated leaf and systemically. In parallel with the activation of GST1, H 2 O 2 accumulated locally and systemically in virus-but not mock-inoculated plants. However, in plants inoculated with infectious CaMV DNA rather than virus particles, the onset of systemic luciferase activity was delayed by 24 to 48 h, suggesting that virion structural proteins act as the elicitor. This phenomenon, which we term the rapid systemic response, preceded virus movement from the inoculated leaf; therefore, the systemic signal is not viral. Systemic, but not local, H 2 O 2 accumulation was abolished in rbohDF double mutants and in etr1-1 and ein2-1 mutants, implicating NADPH oxidase and ethylene signaling in the generation and transduction of the response. Ethylene, but not rbohDF mutants, also showed reduced susceptibility to CaMV, whereas in NahG transgenics, virus levels were similar to wild type. These findings implicate reactive oxygen species and ethylene in signaling in response to CaMV infection, but suggest that salicylic acid does not play an effective role.
A non-uniform alternating electric field induces motion in polarisable particles called dielectrophoresis. The effect is governed by the relative magnitudes of the dielectric properties of the medium and the particles. The technology has been used to manipulate particles for biotechnological applications, including purification, fractionation and concentration of cells and microorganisms. However, the lower size limit for the dielectrophoretic manipulation of particles was believed to be about 1 m, but recent work has proved otherwise. The dielectrophoretic movement and properties of latex beads and a simple rod-shaped virus, tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), have been measured using microfabricated electrode structures. Measurements have been made over a range of suspending medium conductivities, applied frequencies and electric field strengths. It is shown that under appropriate conditions both latex beads and tobacco mosaic virus particles can be selectively attracted to regions of high electric field strength located at the tips of microfabricated electrode structures. The ability to selectively trap and separate bio-particles has many potential applications in the area of biotechnology. © 1997 Elsevier Science B. V.
In order to kill competing strains of the same or closely related bacterial species, many bacteria produce potent narrow-spectrum protein antibiotics known as bacteriocins. Two sequenced strains of the phytopathogenic bacterium Pectobacterium carotovorum carry genes encoding putative bacteriocins which have seemingly evolved through a recombination event to encode proteins containing an N-terminal domain with extensive similarity to a [2Fe-2S] plant ferredoxin and a C-terminal colicin M-like catalytic domain. In this work, we show that these genes encode active bacteriocins, pectocin M1 and M2, which target strains of Pectobacterium carotovorum and Pectobacterium atrosepticum with increased potency under iron limiting conditions. The activity of pectocin M1 and M2 can be inhibited by the addition of spinach ferredoxin, indicating that the ferredoxin domain of these proteins acts as a receptor binding domain. This effect is not observed with the mammalian ferredoxin protein adrenodoxin, indicating that Pectobacterium spp. carries a specific receptor for plant ferredoxins and that these plant pathogens may acquire iron from the host through the uptake of ferredoxin. In further support of this hypothesis we show that the growth of strains of Pectobacterium carotovorum and atrosepticum that are not sensitive to the cytotoxic effects of pectocin M1 is enhanced in the presence of pectocin M1 and M2 under iron limiting conditions. A similar growth enhancement under iron limiting conditions is observed with spinach ferrodoxin, but not with adrenodoxin. Our data indicate that pectocin M1 and M2 have evolved to parasitise an existing iron uptake pathway by using a ferredoxin-containing receptor binding domain as a Trojan horse to gain entry into susceptible cells.
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