19 results on '"Netsu O"'
Search Results
2. Discovery, Genomic Sequence Characterization and Phylogenetic Analysis of Novel RNA Viruses in the Turfgrass Pathogenic Colletotrichum spp. in Japan.
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Hamim I, Urayama SI, Netsu O, Tanaka A, Arie T, Moriyama H, and Komatsu K
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- Phylogeny, Japan, RNA, Viral genetics, Genomics, RNA, Double-Stranded genetics, Colletotrichum genetics, RNA Viruses
- Abstract
Turfgrass used in various areas of the golf course has been found to present anthracnose disease, which is caused by Colletotrichum spp. To obtain potential biological agents, we identified four novel RNA viruses and obtained full-length viral genomes from turfgrass pathogenic Colletotrichum spp. in Japan. We characterized two novel dsRNA partitiviruses: Colletotrichum associated partitivirus 1 (CaPV1) and Colletotrichum associated partitivirus 2 (CaPV2), as well as two negative single-stranded (ss) RNA viruses: Colletotrichum associated negative-stranded RNA virus 1 (CaNSRV1) and Colletotrichum associated negative-stranded RNA virus 2 (CaNSRV2). Using specific RT-PCR assays, we confirmed the presence of CaPV1, CaPV2 and CaNSRV1 in dsRNAs from original and sub-isolates of Colletotrichum sp. MBCT-264, as well as CaNSRV2 in dsRNAs from original and sub-isolates of Colletotrichum sp. MBCT-288. This is the first time mycoviruses have been discovered in turfgrass pathogenic Colletotrichum spp. in Japan. CaPV1 and CaPV2 are new members of the newly proposed genus "Zetapartitivirus" and genus Alphapartitivirus , respectively, in the family Partitiviridae , according to genomic characterization and phylogenetic analysis. Negative sense ssRNA viruses CaNSRV1 and CaNSRV2, on the other hand, are new members of the family Phenuiviridae and the proposed family "Mycoaspirividae", respectively. These findings reveal previously unknown RNA virus diversity and evolution in turfgrass pathogenic Colletotrichum spp.
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- 2022
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3. Functional conservation of EXA1 among diverse plant species for the infection by a family of plant viruses.
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Yusa A, Neriya Y, Hashimoto M, Yoshida T, Fujimoto Y, Hosoe N, Keima T, Tokumaru K, Maejima K, Netsu O, Yamaji Y, and Namba S
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- Plant Diseases virology, Plant Proteins genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Solanum lycopersicum virology, Plant Diseases immunology, Plant Proteins metabolism, Potexvirus physiology, Nicotiana virology
- Abstract
Since the propagation of plant viruses depends on various host susceptibility factors, deficiency in them can prevent viral infection in cultivated and model plants. Recently, we identified the susceptibility factor Essential for poteXvirus Accumulation 1 (EXA1) in Arabidopsis thaliana, and revealed that EXA1-mediated resistance was effective against three potexviruses. Although EXA1 homolog genes are found in tomato and rice, little is known about which viruses depend on EXA1 for their infection capability and whether the function of EXA1 homologs in viral infection is conserved across multiple plant species, including crops. To address these questions, we generated knockdown mutants using virus-induced gene silencing in two Solanaceae species, Nicotiana benthamiana and tomato. In N. benthamiana, silencing of an EXA1 homolog significantly compromised the accumulation of potexviruses and a lolavirus, a close relative of potexviruses, whereas transient expression of EXA1 homologs from tomato and rice complemented viral infection. EXA1 dependency for potexviral infection was also conserved in tomato. These results indicate that EXA1 is necessary for effective accumulation of potexviruses and a lolavirus, and that the function of EXA1 in viral infection is conserved among diverse plant species.
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- 2019
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4. N-terminal region of cysteine-rich protein (CRP) in carlaviruses is involved in the determination of symptom types.
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Fujita N, Komatsu K, Ayukawa Y, Matsuo Y, Hashimoto M, Netsu O, Teraoka T, Yamaji Y, Namba S, and Arie T
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Carlavirus pathogenicity, Nuclear Localization Signals metabolism, Plant Leaves virology, Potexvirus metabolism, RNA Interference, RNA, Viral metabolism, Species Specificity, Nicotiana virology, Viral Proteins chemistry, Carlavirus metabolism, Plant Diseases virology, Viral Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Plant viruses in the genus Carlavirus include more than 65 members. Plants infected with carlaviruses exhibit various symptoms, including leaf malformation and plant stunting. Cysteine-rich protein (CRP) encoded by carlaviruses has been reported to be a pathogenicity determinant. Carlavirus CRPs contain two motifs in their central part: a nuclear localization signal (NLS) and a zinc finger motif (ZF). In addition to these two conserved motifs, carlavirus CRPs possess highly divergent, N-terminal, 34 amino acid residues with unknown function. In this study, to analyse the role of these distinct domains, we tested six carlavirus CRPs for their RNA silencing suppressor activity, ability to enhance the pathogenicity of a heterologous virus and effects on virus accumulation levels. Although all six tested carlavirus CRPs showed RNA silencing suppressor activity at similar levels, symptoms induced by the Potato virus X (PVX) heterogeneous system exhibited two different patterns: leaf malformation and whole-plant stunting. The expression of each carlavirus CRP enhanced PVX accumulation levels, which were not correlated with symptom patterns. PVX-expressing CRP with mutations in either NLS or ZF did not induce symptoms, suggesting that both motifs play critical roles in symptom expression. Further analysis using chimeric CRPs, in which the N-terminal region was replaced with the corresponding region of another CRP, suggested that the N-terminal region of carlavirus CRPs determined the exhibited symptom types. The up-regulation of a plant gene upp-L, which has been reported in a previous study, was also observed in this study; however, the expression level was not responsible for symptom types., (© 2016 BSPP AND JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD.)
- Published
- 2018
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5. Dual targeting of a virus movement protein to ER and plasma membrane subdomains is essential for plasmodesmata localization.
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Ishikawa K, Hashimoto M, Yusa A, Koinuma H, Kitazawa Y, Netsu O, Yamaji Y, and Namba S
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- Arabidopsis metabolism, Cell Membrane metabolism, Endoplasmic Reticulum virology, Membrane Microdomains metabolism, Membrane Microdomains virology, Microtubules metabolism, Microtubules virology, Plasmodesmata metabolism, Protein Transport physiology, Nicotiana virology, Tobacco Mosaic Virus metabolism, Arabidopsis virology, Cell Membrane virology, Endoplasmic Reticulum metabolism, Plant Viral Movement Proteins metabolism, Plasmodesmata virology, Tobacco Mosaic Virus isolation & purification
- Abstract
Plant virus movement proteins (MPs) localize to plasmodesmata (PD) to facilitate virus cell-to-cell movement. Numerous studies have suggested that MPs use a pathway either through the ER or through the plasma membrane (PM). Furthermore, recent studies reported that ER-PM contact sites and PM microdomains, which are subdomains found in the ER and PM, are involved in virus cell-to-cell movement. However, functional relationship of these subdomains in MP traffic to PD has not been described previously. We demonstrate here the intracellular trafficking of fig mosaic virus MP (MPFMV) using live cell imaging, focusing on its ER-directing signal peptide (SPFMV). Transiently expressed MPFMV was distributed predominantly in PD and patchy microdomains of the PM. Investigation of ER translocation efficiency revealed that SPFMV has quite low efficiency compared with SPs of well-characterized plant proteins, calreticulin and CLAVATA3. An MPFMV mutant lacking SPFMV localized exclusively to the PM microdomains, whereas SP chimeras, in which the SP of MPFMV was replaced by an SP of calreticulin or CLAVATA3, localized exclusively to the nodes of the ER, which was labeled with Arabidopsis synaptotagmin 1, a major component of ER-PM contact sites. From these results, we speculated that the low translocation efficiency of SPFMV contributes to the generation of ER-translocated and the microdomain-localized populations, both of which are necessary for PD localization. Consistent with this hypothesis, SP-deficient MPFMV became localized to PD when co-expressed with an SP chimera. Here we propose a new model for the intracellular trafficking of a viral MP. A substantial portion of MPFMV that fails to be translocated is transferred to the microdomains, whereas the remainder of MPFMV that is successfully translocated into the ER subsequently localizes to ER-PM contact sites and plays an important role in the entry of the microdomain-localized MPFMV into PD.
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- 2017
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6. Genome Sequence of Pectobacterium carotovorum Phage PPWS1, Isolated from Japanese Horseradish [Eutrema japonicum (Miq.) Koidz] Showing Soft-Rot Symptoms.
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Hirata H, Kashihara M, Horiike T, Suzuki T, Dohra H, Netsu O, and Tsuyumu S
- Abstract
ITALIC! Pectobacterium carotovorumsubsp. ITALIC! carotovorumand its lytic bacteriophage PPWS1 were isolated from a Japanese horseradish rhizome with soft rot. Sequencing of the phage genomic DNA suggested that PPWS1 is a new species of the family ITALIC! Podoviridaeand has high similarity to the bacteriophage Peat1 infectious to ITALIC! P. atrosepticum., (Copyright © 2016 Hirata et al.)
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- 2016
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7. Functional comparison of RNA silencing suppressor between the p5 protein of rice grassy stunt virus and the p3 protein of rice stripe virus.
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Netsu O, Hiraguri A, Uehara-Ichiki T, Komatsu K, and Sasaya T
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- Agrobacterium genetics, Plants, Genetically Modified, Protein Binding, RNA, Small Interfering metabolism, Nicotiana genetics, Nicotiana virology, Host-Pathogen Interactions, RNA Interference, Tenuivirus immunology, Tenuivirus physiology, Viral Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Rice grassy stunt virus (RGSV) is a member of the genus Tenuivirus, which includes rice stripe virus (RSV), as the type species. A viral suppressor of RNA silencing (VSR) of RGSV has not been identified, whereas the p3 protein of RSV (RSVp3) encoded by the viral-sense (v) strand of RNA3 has been reported to act as a VSR. In this study, we examined the VSR function of the p5 protein of RGSV (RGSVp5), encoded by vRNA5. Expecting it to correspond to the vRNA3 of RSV, we compared the VSR function of RGSVp5 with that of RSVp3. In an Agrobacterium-mediated transient expression assay using a transgenic line of Nicotiana benthamiana that expressed green fluorescent protein and the wild type, RGSVp5 suppressed sense transgene-mediated post-transcriptional gene silencing (S-PTGS), inverted-repeat (IR) transgene-induced PTGS (IR-PTGS), and the systemic spread of GFP silencing, as in the case with RSVp3. By contrast, a gel mobility shift assay revealed that RGSVp5 did not have any distinct binding activity with 21-, 22-, or 24-nucleotide small interfering RNA (siRNA) duplexes, whereas RSVp3 binds to all three sizes of siRNA duplexes. Furthermore, the transiently expressed p5 protein fused with GFP was dispersed mainly in the cytoplasm, whereas the GFP-fused p3 protein of RSV was localized both in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm. Our results suggest that RGSVp5 functions as a VSR but that the suppression mechanism of RNA silencing and the subcellular localization of RGSVp5 differ from those of the analogous VSR, RSVp3, even in the same genus., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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8. Onion yellow phytoplasma P38 protein plays a role in adhesion to the hosts.
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Neriya Y, Maejima K, Nijo T, Tomomitsu T, Yusa A, Himeno M, Netsu O, Hamamoto H, Oshima K, and Namba S
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- Adhesins, Bacterial chemistry, Adhesins, Bacterial genetics, Adhesins, Bacterial metabolism, Amino Acid Sequence, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Molecular Sequence Data, Phytoplasma chemistry, Phytoplasma genetics, Sequence Alignment, Bacterial Adhesion, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Onions microbiology, Phytoplasma physiology, Plant Diseases microbiology
- Abstract
Adhesins are microbial surface proteins that mediate the adherence of microbial pathogens to host cell surfaces. In Mollicutes, several adhesins have been reported in mycoplasmas and spiroplasmas. Adhesins P40 of Mycoplasma agalactiae and P89 of Spiroplasma citri contain a conserved amino acid sequence known as the Mollicutes adhesin motif (MAM), whose function in the host cell adhesion remains unclear. Here, we show that phytoplasmas, which are plant-pathogenic mollicutes transmitted by insect vectors, possess an adhesion-containing MAM that was identified in a putative membrane protein, PAM289 (P38), of the 'Candidatus Phytoplasma asteris,' OY strain. P38 homologs and their MAMs were highly conserved in related phytoplasma strains. While P38 protein was expressed in OY-infected insect and plant hosts, binding assays showed that P38 interacts with insect extract, and weakly with plant extract. Interestingly, the interaction of P38 with the insect extract depended on MAM. These results suggest that P38 is a phytoplasma adhesin that interacts with the hosts. In addition, the MAM of adhesins is important for the interaction between P38 protein and hosts., (© 2014 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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9. Recent progress in research on cell-to-cell movement of rice viruses.
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Hiraguri A, Netsu O, Sasaki N, Nyunoya H, and Sasaya T
- Abstract
To adapt to plants as hosts, plant viruses have evolutionally needed the capacity to modify the host plasmodesmata (PD) that connect adjacent cells. Plant viruses have acquired one or more genes that encode movement proteins (MPs), which facilitate the cell-to-cell movement of infectious virus entities through PD to adjacent cells. Because of the diversity in their genome organization and in their coding sequences, rice viruses may each have a distinct cell-to-cell movement strategy. The complexity of their unusual genome organizations and replication strategies has so far hampered reverse genetic research on their genome in efforts to investigate virally encoded proteins that are involved in viral movement. However, the MP of a particular virus can complement defects in cell-to-cell movement of other distantly related or even unrelated viruses. Trans-complementation experiments using a combination of a movement-defective virus and viral proteins of interest to identify MPs of several rice viruses have recently been successful. In this article, we reviewed recent research that has advanced our understanding of cell-to-cell movement of rice viruses.
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- 2014
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10. In Planta Recognition of a Double-Stranded RNA Synthesis Protein Complex by a Potexviral RNA Silencing Suppressor.
- Author
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Okano Y, Senshu H, Hashimoto M, Neriya Y, Netsu O, Minato N, Yoshida T, Maejima K, Oshima K, Komatsu K, Yamaji Y, and Namba S
- Abstract
RNA silencing plays an important antiviral role in plants and invertebrates. To counteract antiviral RNA silencing, most plant viruses have evolved viral suppressors of RNA silencing (VSRs). TRIPLE GENE BLOCK PROTEIN1 (TGBp1) of potexviruses is a well-characterized VSR, but the detailed mechanism by which it suppresses RNA silencing remains unclear. We demonstrate that transgenic expression of TGBp1 of plantago asiatica mosaic virus (PlAMV) induced developmental abnormalities in Arabidopsis thaliana similar to those observed in mutants of SUPPRESSOR OF GENE SILENCING3 (SGS3) and RNA-DEPENDENT RNA POLYMERASE6 (RDR6) required for the trans-acting small interfering RNA synthesis pathway. PlAMV-TGBp1 inhibits SGS3/RDR6-dependent double-stranded RNA synthesis in the trans-acting small interfering RNA pathway. TGBp1 interacts with SGS3 and RDR6 and coaggregates with SGS3/RDR6 bodies, which are normally dispersed in the cytoplasm. In addition, TGBp1 forms homooligomers, whose formation coincides with TGBp1 aggregation with SGS3/RDR6 bodies. These results reveal the detailed molecular function of TGBp1 as a VSR and shed new light on the SGS3/RDR6-dependent double-stranded RNA synthesis pathway as another general target of VSRs., (© 2014 American Society of Plant Biologists. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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11. Biological and genetic diversity of Wheat yellow mosaic virus (Genus Bymovirus).
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Ohki T, Netsu O, Kojima H, Sakai J, Onuki M, Maoka T, Shirako Y, and Sasaya T
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Base Sequence, Genotype, Geography, Japan, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length, Potyviridae classification, Potyviridae isolation & purification, RNA, Viral genetics, Sequence Analysis, RNA, Genetic Variation, Genome, Viral genetics, Plant Diseases virology, Potyviridae genetics, Triticum virology
- Abstract
The biological and genetic diversity of Wheat yellow mosaic virus (WYMV) isolates in Japan was characterized. On the basis of wheat cultivar reactions, 14 WYMV isolates from various places were classified into pathotypes I, II, or III. These were distributed in central, northern, and southern areas of Japan, respectively. WYMV isolates comprised three genotypes (A, A' and B) based on amino acid differences in RNA1 and two genotypes (a and b) based on amino acid differences in RNA2. A correlation was found between the WYMV RNA1-based genotype and pathotype, suggesting that factors associated with pathogenicity map to RNA1. Genotype Aa and A'a were distributed mainly in the central to southern areas of Japan, and genotype Bb was found in northern areas of Japan, as shown by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. Chinese isolates YA and YZ were closely related to genotypes Bb and Aa, respectively. Wheat was introduced from China to Japan in the 4th and 5th centuries, and the two genotypes of WYMV might also have been introduced with the crop from China and later adapted to local wheat cultivars in Japan.
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- 2014
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12. Transgenic strategies to confer resistance against viruses in rice plants.
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Sasaya T, Nakazono-Nagaoka E, Saika H, Aoki H, Hiraguri A, Netsu O, Uehara-Ichiki T, Onuki M, Toki S, Saito K, and Yatou O
- Abstract
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is cultivated in more than 100 countries and supports nearly half of the world's population. Developing efficient methods to control rice viruses is thus an urgent necessity because viruses cause serious losses in rice yield. Most rice viruses are transmitted by insect vectors, notably planthoppers and leafhoppers. Viruliferous insect vectors can disperse their viruses over relatively long distances, and eradication of the viruses is very difficult once they become widespread. Exploitation of natural genetic sources of resistance is one of the most effective approaches to protect crops from virus infection; however, only a few naturally occurring rice genes confer resistance against rice viruses. Many investigators are using genetic engineering of rice plants as a potential strategy to control viral diseases. Using viral genes to confer pathogen-derived resistance against crops is a well-established procedure, and the expression of various viral gene products has proved to be effective in preventing or reducing infection by various plant viruses since the 1990s. RNA interference (RNAi), also known as RNA silencing, is one of the most efficient methods to confer resistance against plant viruses on their respective crops. In this article, we review the recent progress, mainly conducted by our research group, in transgenic strategies to confer resistance against tenuiviruses and reoviruses in rice plants. Our findings also illustrate that not all RNAi constructs against viral RNAs are equally effective in preventing virus infection and that it is important to identify the viral "Achilles' heel" gene to target for RNAi attack when engineering plants.
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- 2014
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13. A replicase of Potato virus X acts as the resistance-breaking determinant for JAX1-mediated resistance.
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Sugawara K, Shiraishi T, Yoshida T, Fujita N, Netsu O, Yamaji Y, and Namba S
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Amino Acid Substitution, Molecular Sequence Data, Plant Diseases immunology, Plant Lectins metabolism, Plants, Genetically Modified, Potexvirus genetics, RNA, Viral genetics, RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase metabolism, Sequence Alignment, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Nicotiana immunology, Viral Proteins genetics, Viral Proteins metabolism, Plant Diseases virology, Plant Immunity, Potexvirus enzymology, Potexvirus pathogenicity, RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase genetics, Nicotiana virology
- Abstract
Lectin-mediated resistance (LMR) has been suggested to comprise an uncharacterized branch of antiviral plant innate immunity. To unveil the feature of resistance conferred by jacalin-type lectin required for potexvirus resistance 1 (JAX1), a recently isolated LMR gene against potexviruses, we analyzed the resistance-breaking variants to find the viral component involved in resistance. We employed grafting-mediated inoculation, a high-pressure virus inoculation method, to obtain Potato virus X (PVX) variants that can overcome JAX1-mediated resistance. Whole-genome sequencing of the variants suggested that a single amino acid in the methyl transferase domain of the replicase encoded by PVX is responsible for this resistance-breaking property. Reintroduction of the amino-acid substitution to avirulent wild-type PVX was sufficient to overcome the JAX1-mediated resistance. These results suggest that viral replicase is involved in JAX1-mediated resistance. The residue that determines the resistance-breaking properties was highly conserved among potexviruses, suggesting a general role of the residue in potexvirus-JAX1 interactions.
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- 2013
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14. Fig mosaic emaravirus p4 protein is involved in cell-to-cell movement.
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Ishikawa K, Maejima K, Komatsu K, Netsu O, Keima T, Shiraishi T, Okano Y, Hashimoto M, Yamaji Y, and Namba S
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- Agrobacterium tumefaciens, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Gene Expression Regulation, Viral, Genes, Viral, Luminescent Proteins genetics, Luminescent Proteins metabolism, Plant Leaves metabolism, Plant Leaves virology, Plant Viral Movement Proteins genetics, Plant Viral Movement Proteins metabolism, Plants, Genetically Modified, Plasmodesmata virology, RNA, Viral genetics, Nicotiana virology, Plant Viral Movement Proteins physiology, Plant Viruses physiology
- Abstract
Fig mosaic virus (FMV), a member of the newly formed genus Emaravirus, is a segmented negative-strand RNA virus. Each of the six genomic FMV segments contains a single ORF: that of RNA4 encodes the protein p4. FMV-p4 is presumed to be the movement protein (MP) of the virus; however, direct experimental evidence for this is lacking. We assessed the intercellular distribution of FMV-p4 in plant cells by confocal laser scanning microscopy and we found that FMV-p4 was localized to plasmodesmata and to the plasma membrane accompanied by tubule-like structures. A series of experiments designed to examine the movement functions revealed that FMV-p4 has the capacity to complement viral cell-to-cell movement, prompt GFP diffusion between cells, and spread by itself to neighbouring cells. Altogether, our findings demonstrated that FMV-p4 shares several properties with other viral MPs and plays an important role in cell-to-cell movement.
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- 2013
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15. The movement protein encoded by gene 3 of rice transitory yellowing virus is associated with virus particles.
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Hiraguri A, Hibino H, Hayashi T, Netsu O, Shimizu T, Uehara-Ichiki T, Omura T, Sasaki N, Nyunoya H, and Sasaya T
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- Cell Wall metabolism, Cell Wall virology, Escherichia coli genetics, Escherichia coli metabolism, Oryza metabolism, Plant Leaves metabolism, Plant Leaves virology, Plant Viral Movement Proteins metabolism, Plasmodesmata metabolism, Plasmodesmata virology, Rhabdoviridae metabolism, Nicotiana genetics, Nicotiana metabolism, Nicotiana virology, Tobamovirus genetics, Tobamovirus metabolism, Viral Proteins genetics, Viral Proteins metabolism, Viral Structural Proteins genetics, Viral Structural Proteins metabolism, Virion metabolism, Oryza genetics, Oryza virology, Plant Diseases virology, Plant Viral Movement Proteins genetics, Rhabdoviridae genetics, Virion genetics
- Abstract
Gene 3 in the genomes of several plant-infecting rhabdoviruses, including rice transitory yellowing virus (RTYV), has been postulated to encode a cell-to-cell movement protein (MP). Trans-complementation experiments using a movement-defective tomato mosaic virus and the P3 protein of RTYV, encoded by gene 3, facilitated intercellular transport of the mutant virus. In transient-expression experiments with the GFP-fused P3 protein in epidermal leaf cells of Nicotiana benthamiana, the P3 protein was associated with the nucleus and plasmodesmata. Immunogold-labelling studies of thin sections of RTYV-infected rice plants using an antiserum against Escherichia coli-expressed His(6)-tagged P3 protein indicated that the P3 protein was located in cell walls and on virus particles. In Western blots using antisera against E. coli-expressed P3 protein and purified RTYV, the P3 protein was detected in purified RTYV, whilst antiserum against purified RTYV reacted with the E. coli-expressed P3 protein. After immunogold labelling of crude sap from RTYV-infected rice leaves, the P3 protein, as well as the N protein, was detected on the ribonucleocapsid core that emerged from partially disrupted virus particles. These results provide evidence that the P3 protein of RTYV, which functions as a viral MP, is a viral structural protein and seems to be associated with the ribonucleocapsid core of virus particles.
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- 2012
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16. Three-dimensional analysis of the association of viral particles with mitochondria during the replication of Rice gall dwarf virus.
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Wei T, Miyazaki N, Uehara-Ichiki T, Hibino H, Shimizu T, Netsu O, Kikuchi A, Sasaya T, Iwasaki K, and Omura T
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Binding Sites genetics, Capsid Proteins chemistry, Capsid Proteins genetics, Capsid Proteins metabolism, Cell Line, Electron Microscope Tomography, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Microscopy, Confocal, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Mitochondria ultrastructure, Mitochondrial Membranes metabolism, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Oryza virology, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Reoviridae genetics, Reoviridae ultrastructure, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid, Virion ultrastructure, Mitochondria virology, Reoviridae physiology, Virion physiology, Virus Replication
- Abstract
Examination of cultured insect vector cells that had been infected with Rice gall dwarf virus (RGDV), using transmission electron microscopy and confocal microscopy, revealed the presence of clusters of virus-coated mitochondria around viroplasms in which replication and assembly of RGDV occurred, suggesting a role for mitochondria in supplying the energy required for viral morphogenetic processes. Electron tomography revealed that RGDV particles on the surface of mitochondria are arrayed in an orderly but loose manner, unlike tightly packaged particles in vesicular compartments, suggesting the presence of counterpart molecules on the surface of mitochondria. The viral particles in close proximity to mitochondria were aligned along intermediate filaments, which might serve as scaffolds for the anchorage of these particles. RGDV has a putative mitochondrion-targeting sequence on the outer surface of the outer-capsid protein P8. The arrangement of RGDV particles around mitochondria suggests that the region of the P8 protein containing the mitochondrion-targeting sequence might attach to a molecule like a receptor on the outer mitochondrial membrane. Our analysis demonstrates the three-dimensional arrangement and molecular basis for the mitochondrial proximity of RGDV particles during viral replication., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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17. The nonstructural protein pC6 of rice grassy stunt virus trans-complements the cell-to-cell spread of a movement-defective tomato mosaic virus.
- Author
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Hiraguri A, Netsu O, Shimizu T, Uehara-Ichiki T, Omura T, Sasaki N, Nyunoya H, and Sasaya T
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- Genetic Complementation Test, Viral Nonstructural Proteins genetics, Virulence Factors genetics, Tenuivirus genetics, Tenuivirus pathogenicity, Tobamovirus genetics, Tobamovirus pathogenicity, Viral Nonstructural Proteins metabolism, Virulence Factors metabolism
- Abstract
The nonstructural protein pC6 encoded by rice grassy stunt virus is thought to correspond functionally to the nonstructural protein pC4 of rice stripe virus, which can support viral cell-to-cell movement. In a trans-complementation experiment with a movement-defective tomato mosaic virus, pC6 and pC4 facilitated intercellular transport of the virus. Transient expression of pC6, fused with green fluorescent protein, in epidermal cells was predominantly observed close to the cell wall as well as in a few punctate structures, presumably associated with plasmodesmata. These results suggest that pC6 has a role similar to that of pC4 in viral cell-to-cell movement.
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- 2011
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18. Rice dwarf viruses with dysfunctional genomes generated in plants are filtered out in vector insects: implications for the origin of the virus.
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Pu Y, Kikuchi A, Moriyasu Y, Tomaru M, Jin Y, Suga H, Hagiwara K, Akita F, Shimizu T, Netsu O, Suzuki N, Uehara-Ichiki T, Sasaya T, Wei T, Li Y, and Omura T
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Codon, Nonsense, Selection, Genetic, Viral Proteins genetics, Disease Vectors, Insecta virology, Oryza virology, Plant Diseases virology, Reoviridae genetics, Reoviridae pathogenicity
- Abstract
Rice dwarf virus (RDV), with 12 double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) genome segments (S1 to S12), replicates in and is transmitted by vector insects. The RDV-plant host-vector insect system allows us to examine the evolution, adaptation, and population genetics of a plant virus. We compared the effects of long-term maintenance of RDV on population structures in its two hosts. The maintenance of RDV in rice plants for several years resulted in gradual accumulation of nonsense mutations in S2 and S10, absence of expression of the encoded proteins, and complete loss of transmissibility. RDV maintained in cultured insect cells for 6 years retained an intact protein-encoding genome. Thus, the structural P2 protein encoded by S2 and the nonstructural Pns10 protein encoded by S10 of RDV are subject to different selective pressures in the two hosts, and mutations accumulating in the host plant are detrimental in vector insects. However, one round of propagation in insect cells or individuals purged the populations of RDV that had accumulated deleterious mutations in host plants, with exclusive survival of fully competent RDV. Our results suggest that during the course of evolution, an ancestral form of RDV, of insect virus origin, might have acquired the ability to replicate in a host plant, given its reproducible mutations in the host plant that abolish vector transmissibility and viability in nature.
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- 2011
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19. Molecular detection of nine rice viruses by a reverse-transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification assay.
- Author
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Le DT, Netsu O, Uehara-Ichiki T, Shimizu T, Choi IR, Omura T, and Sasaya T
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- Agriculture, Animals, Base Sequence, Conserved Sequence, DNA Primers, DNA, Viral genetics, Insect Vectors virology, Plant Leaves virology, Plant Viruses genetics, Reverse Transcription, Sensitivity and Specificity, Viral Structural Proteins genetics, Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques methods, Oryza virology, Plant Viruses isolation & purification
- Abstract
A reverse-transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) assay was established for the detection of nine viruses from infected rice plants, including rice black-streaked dwarf virus (RBSDV), rice dwarf virus (RDV), rice gall dwarf virus (RGDV), rice ragged stunt virus (RRSV), rice transitory yellowing virus (RTYV), rice stripe virus (RSV), rice grassy stunt virus (RGSV), rice tungro spherical virus (RTSV), and rice tungro bacilliform virus (RTBV). Virus-specific primer sets were designed from the genome sequences of these viruses. By the combination of RNA rapid extraction and RT-LAMP, these nine viruses could be detected within 2h from infected rice plants. The sensitivities of the assays were either higher than (for RSV, RTBV, and RTYV) or similar (for RDV) to those of one-step RT-PCR. Furthermore, RTBV and RTSV were detected not only in infected rice plants but also in viruliferous insect vectors. The RT-LAMP assays may facilitate studies on rice disease epidemiology, outbreak surveillance, and molecular pathology., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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