Viral and cellular factors involved in phloem transport of plant viruses
2013
Hipper , Clémence (INRA , Colmar (France). UMR 1131 Santé de la Vigne et Qualité du Vin) | Brault , Veronique (INRA , Colmar (France). UMR 1131 Santé de la Vigne et Qualité du Vin) | Ziegler-Graff , Véronique (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, STRASBOURG(France). Laboratoire Propre du CNRS (UPR 2357), Virologie Végétale, Institut de Biologie Moléculaire des Plantes) | Revers , Frederic (INRA , Villenave D'Ornon (France). UMR 1332 Biologie du Fruit et Pathologie)
Phloem transport of plant viruses is an essential step in the setting-up of a complete infection of a host plant. After an initial replication step in the first cells, viruses spread from cell-to-cell through mesophyll cells, until they reach the vasculature where they rapidly move to distant sites in order to establish the infection of the whole plant. This last step is referred to as systemic transport, or long-distance movement, and involves virus crossings through several cellular barriers: bundle sheath, vascular parenchyma, and companion cells for virus loading into sieve elements (SE). Viruses are then passively transported within the source-to-sink flow of photoassimilates and are unloaded from SE into sink tissues. However, the molecular mechanisms governing virus long-distance movement are far from being understood. While most viruses seem to move systemically as virus particles, some viruses are transported in SE as viral ribonucleoprotein complexes (RNP). The nature of the cellular and viral factors constituting these RNPs is still poorly known. The topic of this review will mainly focus on the host and viral factors that facilitate or restrict virus long-distance movement.
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