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Plant Physiology 138:1815-1821 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists Virus-Host Interactions during Movement Processes1Scottish Crop Research Institute, Invergowrie, Dundee DD2 5DA, United Kingdom (P.B.); and Institute of Molecular Plant Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Mayfield Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JH, United Kingdom (K.J.O.)
Plant viruses must invade and infect as much of their hosts as possible to maximize their chances of successful perpetuation. They move cell to cell via plasmodesmata (PD), which they modify to a greater or lesser extent, and to distant parts of the plant through the vascular system. Plant viruses encode one or more nonstructural proteins specifically required for movement within their hosts and many also require their capsid (coat) protein(s). Classically, a viral movement protein (MP) is defined by its ability to increase the plasmodesmal size exclusion limit (SEL) and to move cell to cell; however, other viral proteins that do not themselves move may be essential for the movement process. Viruses that infect plants have developed a variety of strategies to move from cell to cell and are heavily dependent on endogenous host transport systems during movement, as with all aspects of their life cycles. Rather than attempt to cover all reported virus-host interactions during movement, in this short review, we would like to focus on some common themes that appear in the literature regarding each of the steps involved in viral cell-to-cell movement. These are the use of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)/actin network as an intracellular transport pathway, recognition of adhesion sites at the cell periphery, modification of PD by alteration of the cell wall structure, heat shock protein (Hsp) 70-class chaperones as potential translocation factors, and regulation of movement. We will discuss how the movement processes of different viruses may utilize these steps in different ways or may not involve all of these steps. Other reviewers have covered different aspects of short and long distance movement processes, such as the role of the cytoskeleton and the requirement for suppression of host defense responses (for example, Reichel et al., 1999
With the constant streaming of the plant cell cytoplasm, one could imagine that viral MPs would only need to go with the flow and bind to PD or other peripheral target sites when they encounter proteins that they recognize. Evidence from numerous studies suggests that this is not generally the case, although one cannot discount that a proportion of any MP may arrive at its destination in this way. Cell-to-cell movement is generally an early event in the infection process, occurring in 4 h for tobacco rattle virus in Nicotiana clevelandii or 5 h for tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) in N. tabacum (Fannin and Shaw, 1987
The MCs of viruses with ER-located MPs are likely to be assembled on the ER (Figure 1a
). The ER passes through PD in the form of the desmotubule and is intimately entwined with the actin cytoskeleton (Boevink et al., 1998
Proteins in the ER membrane flow very rapidly, so it is extremely difficult to photobleach patches of labeled ER, and this flow is directional and dependent on the actin/myosin system (Runions et al., 2005
The MPs of the tubule forming grapevine fanleaf virus (GFLV) and cowpea mosaic virus, which are representative of a large group of viruses that modify PD extensively for movement, were not noted to associate with the ER (Pouwels et al., 2002
An alternative route to PD would be to bind to a protein that was being targeted there by the host secretory pathway, such as the recently identified reversibly glycosylated polypeptide (Sagi et al., 2005
Few plasmodesmal protein-virus MP interactions have been reliably demonstrated. TMV, turnip vein clearing virus, and cauliflower mosaic virus MPs bind PME (Dorokhov et al., 1999
Several virus MPs appear to bind to peripheral attachment sites (Heinlein et al., 1998
An apparently conserved Tyr-based sorting motif YXX
Since the first demonstration of the ability of the TMV MP to increase plasmodesmal SELs, a process referred to as gating (Wolf et al., 1989
There is not a great deal known about how the plasmodesmal aperture is regulated in the plant. Ding et al. (1996)
It has been proposed that myosin spokes line the plasmodesmal channel, linking actin to the plasma membrane (Overall and Blackman, 1996
The interaction of TMV MP with PME may regulate the activity of PME and thus loosen the cell wall around PD, allowing the PD to open more easily (Figure 1d). With this in mind, an alternative view of the interaction between PME and TMV MP might be that the MP could be recruiting additional PME to the PD in order to assist gating rather than merely relying on PME for targeting. The association of TMV MP with calreticulin (Chen et al., 2005
Hsp70 family chaperones are involved in many cellular processes (Mayer and Bukau, 2005
The demonstration of PD trafficking of Hsp70-class proteins from the phloem (Aoki et al., 2002
Closteroviruses are the only known group to encode their own Hsp70 homologs, and these proteins have been shown to be MPs (Peremyslov et al., 1999
It is unlikely that the observed regulation of viral MPs is entirely due to host defense responses, as it is in the interests of a virus to minimize the damage to its host. Thus, viruses may collude in the down-regulation of their movement functions. The efficient down-regulation or removal of viral MP would ensure that the disruption of PD SEL and hence of signal and nutrient flow does not continue ad infinitum. The TMV MP is rapidly degraded about six cells away from the leading edge of a viral infection site, forming the classic halo pattern observed when the MP is fused to fluorescent proteins (Szecsi et al., 1999
Two proteins shown to interact with TMV MP, the microtubule-associated protein MPB2C (Kragler et al., 2003
PMTV TGB2 was found to associate with vesicle-like structures and interact with an RME8 homolog, a J-domain protein involved in endocytosis (Haupt et al., 2005
Although viruses are capable of enormous variation, their cell-to-cell movement strategies are necessarily limited by the cellular equipment available for them to exploit and by the fact that all viruses studied to date must pass through PD. Some of the interactions between viral and host proteins may be explained in several ways, suggesting that these interactions may be multifunctional. The indications of common themes arising from viral movement studies imply that there has been convergent evolution of viral cell-to-cell movement mechanisms. The convergence of data suggests that we may be uncovering the fundamental cellular processes involved in macromolecular trafficking such as those that may be used by non-cell autonomous host proteins like KNOTTED1 (Lucas et al., 1995 Received June 6, 2005; returned for revision June 30, 2005; accepted June 30, 2005.
1 This work was supported by the Scottish Executive Environment and Rural Affairs Department. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.105.066761. * Corresponding author; e-mail petra.boevink{at}scri.ac.uk; fax 441382562426.
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