Infection of non-host model plant species with the narrow-host range cacao swollen shoot virus
2017
Friscina, Arianna | Chiappetta, Laura | Jacquemond, Mireille | Tepfer, Mark | Plant Virology Group ; ICGEB Biosafety outstation | Unité de Pathologie Végétale (PV) ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) | Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin (IJPB) ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-AgroParisTech
Cacao swollen shoot virus (CSSV) is a major pathogen of cacao (Theobroma cacao) in Africa, and long-standing efforts to limit its spread by culling infected trees have had very limited success. CSSV has proved to be a particularly difficult virus to study, since it has a very narrow host range, limited to several tropical tree species. Furthermore, the virus is not mechanically transmissible, and its insect vector can only be used with difficulty. Thus, the only efficient means to infect cacao plants that has been experimentally described so far are by particle bombardment or agroinoculation of cacao plants with an infectious clone. We have genetically transformed three non-host species with an infectious form of the CSSV genome: two experimental hosts widely used in plant virology (Nicotiana tabacum and N. benthamiana) and the model species Arabidopsis thaliana. In transformed plants of all three species, the CSSV genome was able to replicate, and in tobacco, CSSV particles could be observed by immunosorbent electron microscopy, demonstrating that the complete virus cycle could be completed in a non-host plant. These results will greatly facilitate preliminary testing of CSSV control strategies using plants that are easy to raise and to transform genetically.
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