Cucumber mosaic virus infection affects sugar transport in melon plants. (17/288)

Viral infection often affects carbon assimilation and metabolism in host plants. To better understand the effect of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) infection on sugar transport, carbohydrate levels and the amounts of the various sugars in the phloem sap were determined in infected melon (Cucumis melo L.) plants. Source leaves infected with CMV were characterized by high concentrations of reducing sugars and relatively low starch levels. The altered level of carbohydrates was accompanied by increased respiration and decreased net photosynthetic rates in the infected leaves. Although stachyose was the predominant sugar in phloem sap collected from petioles of control leaves, sucrose (Suc) was a major sugar in the phloem sap of infected leaves. Moreover, analyses of the newly fixed (14)CO(2) revealed a high proportion of radioactive Suc in the phloem sap of infected leaves 60 min post-labeling. The alteration in phloem sap sugar composition was found in source, but not old, leaves. Moreover, elevations in Suc concentration were also evident in source leaves that did not exhibit symptoms or contain detectable amounts of virus particles. The mode by which CMV infection may cause alterations in sugar transport is discussed in terms of the mechanism by which sugars are loaded into the phloem of cucurbit plants.  (+info)

Cucumber mosaic virus D satellite RNA-induced programmed cell death in tomato. (18/288)

D satellite RNA (satRNA) with its helper virus, namely, cucumber mosaic virus, causes systemic necrosis in tomato. The infected plant exhibits a distinct spatial and temporal cell death pattern. The distinct features of chromatin condensation and nuclear DNA fragmentation indicate that programmed cell death is involved. In addition, satRNA localization and terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling show that cell death is initiated from the infected phloem or cambium cells and spreads to other nearby infected cells. Timing of the onset of necrosis after inoculation implicates the involvement of cell developmental processes in initiating tomato cell death. Analysis of the accumulation of minus- and plus-strand satRNAs in the infected plants indicates a correlation between high amounts of minus-strand satRNA and tomato cell death.  (+info)

The structure of cucumber mosaic virus and comparison to cowpea chlorotic mottle virus. (19/288)

The structure of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV; strain Fny) has been determined to a 3.2-A resolution using X-ray crystallography. Despite the fact that CMV has only 19% capsid protein sequence identity (34% similarity) to cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV), the core structures of these two members of the Bromoviridae family are highly homologous. As suggested by a previous low-resolution structural study, the 305-A diameter (maximum) of CMV is approximately 12 A larger than that of CCMV. In CCMV, the structures of the A, B, and C subunits are nearly identical except in their N termini. In contrast, the structures of two loops in subunit A of CMV differ from those in B and C. These loops are 6 and 7 residues longer than the analogous regions in CCMV. Unlike that of CCMV, the capsid of CMV does not undergo swelling at pH 7.0 and is stable at pH 9.0. This may be partly due to the fact that the N termini of the B and C subunits form a unique bundle of six amphipathic helices oriented down into the virion core at the threefold axes. In addition, while CCMV has a cluster of aspartic acid residues at the quasi-threefold axis that are proposed to bind metal in a pH-dependent manner, this cluster is replaced by complementing acids and bases in CMV. Finally, this structure clearly demonstrates that the residues important for aphid transmission lie at the outermost portion of the betaH-betaI loop and yields details of the portions of the virus that are hypothesized to mediate binding to aphid mouthparts.  (+info)

Cucumber mosaic virus mutants with altered physical properties and defective in aphid vector transmission. (20/288)

Two mutant strains of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) were investigated with respect to virion stability and molecular determinants of aphid vector transmission. The mutant 2A1-MT-60x, derived from the mechanically passaged wild type 2A1-AT, is poorly transmissible by the aphid Aphis gossypii and not transmissible by the aphid Myzus persicae, whereas the wild type virus is transmissible by both aphid species. The mutant phenotype was shown to be conferred by a single encoded amino acid change of alanine to threonine at position 162 of the coat protein (CP). Modifying the mutant CP gene to encode the wild type sequence (alanine) at position 162 restored aphid transmission. To test for a correspondence between changes in the physical stability of virions and defects in aphid transmission, a urea disruption assay was developed. Virions of aphid-transmissible strains 2A1-AT and CMV-Fny were stable with treatments of up to between 3 and 4 M urea. In this assay mutant viruses 2A1-MT-60x and CMV-M were less stable, as they were completely disrupted at urea concentrations of 2 and 1 M urea, respectively. The mutant 2A1-MT-60x also accumulated at a reduced level in infected squash relative to the wild type virus. These studies suggest that a primary factor in the loss of aphid transmissibility of some strains of CMV is a reduction in virion stability.  (+info)

Complex spatial responses to cucumber mosaic virus infection in susceptible Cucurbita pepo cotyledons. (21/288)

Cucumber mosaic virus infection of its susceptible host Cucurbita pepo results in a program of biochemical changes after virus infection. Applying a spatial analysis to expanding infected lesions, we investigated the relationship between the changes in enzyme activity and gene expression. Patterns of altered expression were seen that could not be detected by RNA gel blot analysis. For all the host genes studied, there was a downregulation (shutoff) of expression within the lesion. In addition, two distinct types of upregulation were observed. The expression of heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) and NADP(+)-dependent malic enzyme (NADP-ME) showed induction in apparently uninfected cells ahead of the infection. This response was more localized than the upregulation exhibited by catalase expression, which occurred throughout the uninfected regions of the tissue. The experiments showed that virus infection induced immediate and subsequent changes in gene expression by the host and that the infection has the potential to give advance signaling of the imminent infection.  (+info)

Recognition of the core RNA promoter for minus-strand RNA synthesis by the replicases of Brome mosaic virus and Cucumber mosaic virus. (22/288)

Replication of viral RNA genomes requires the specific interaction between the replicase and the RNA template. Members of the Bromovirus and Cucumovirus genera have a tRNA-like structure at the 3' end of their genomic RNAs that interacts with the replicase and is required for minus-strand synthesis. In Brome mosaic virus (BMV), a stem-loop structure named C (SLC) is present within the tRNA-like region and is required for replicase binding and initiation of RNA synthesis in vitro. We have prepared an enriched replicase fraction from tobacco plants infected with the Fny isolate of Cucumber mosaic virus (Fny-CMV) that will direct synthesis from exogenously added templates. Using this replicase, we demonstrate that the SLC-like structure in Fny-CMV plays a role similar to that of BMV SLC in interacting with the CMV replicase. While the majority of CMV isolates have SLC-like elements similar to that of Fny-CMV, a second group displays sequence or structural features that are distinct but nonetheless recognized by Fny-CMV replicase for RNA synthesis. Both motifs have a 5'CA3' dinucleotide that is invariant in the CMV isolates examined, and mutational analysis indicates that these are critical for interaction with the replicase. In the context of the entire tRNA-like element, both CMV SLC-like motifs are recognized by the BMV replicase. However, neither motif can direct synthesis by the BMV replicase in the absence of other tRNA-like elements, indicating that other features of the CMV tRNA can induce promoter recognition by a heterologous replicase.  (+info)

Efficient and specific initiation of subgenomic RNA synthesis by cucumber mosaic virus replicase in vitro requires an upstream RNA stem-loop. (23/288)

We defined the minimal core promoter sequences responsible for efficient and accurate initiation of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) subgenomic RNA4. The necessary sequence maps to positions -28 to +15 relative to the initiation cytidylate used to initiate RNA synthesis in vivo. Positions -28 to -5 contain a 9-bp stem and a 6-nucleotide purine-rich loop. Considerable changes in the stem and the loop are tolerated for RNA synthesis, including replacement with a different stem-loop. In a template competition assay, the stem-loop and the initiation cytidylate are sufficient to interact with the CMV replicase. Thus, the mechanism of core promoter recognition by the CMV replicase appears to be less specific in comparison to the minimal subgenomic core promoter of the closely related brome mosaic virus.  (+info)

A subpopulation of RNA 1 of Cucumber mosaic virus contains 3' termini originating from RNAs 2 or 3. (24/288)

Tobacco plants transgenic for RNA 1 of Cucumber mosaic virus and inoculated with transcript of RNAs 2 and 3 regenerated viral RNA 1 from the transgenic mRNA, and the plants became systemically infected by the reconstituted virus. cDNA fragments corresponding to the 3' non-coding region (NCR) of viral RNA 1 were amplified, cloned and sequenced. In some clones the termini of the 3' NCR corresponded to those of viral RNAs 2 or 3. This suggested that in some cases RNA 1 may have been regenerated during replication by a template switching mechanism between the inoculated transcript RNAs and the mRNA. However, encapsidated, recombinant RNA 1 with the 3' NCR ends originating from RNAs 2 or 3 also was found in virus samples that had been passaged exclusively through non-transgenic plants. Thus, these chimeras occur naturally due to recombination between wild-type viral RNAs, and they are found encapsidated in low, but detectable amounts.  (+info)