JOURNAL ARTICLE
Volume electron microscopy reconstruction uncovers a physical barrier that limits virus to phloem.
Published In: New Phytologist, 2024, v. 241, n. 1. P. 343 1 of 3
Database: Academic Search Ultimate 2 of 3
Authored By: Lv, Mingfang; Dai, Yuanxing; Xie, Li; Guo, Jiansheng; Liao, Zhenfeng; Shang, Weina; Zhao, Xiaohuan; Hong, Jian; Zhang, Heng‐Mu 3 of 3
Abstract
Summary: Most plant reoviruses are phloem‐limited, but the mechanism has remained unknown for more than half a century. Southern rice black‐streaked dwarf virus (Fijivirus, Reoviridae) causes phloem‐derived tumors, where its virions, genomes, and proteins accumulate, and it was used as a model to explore how its host plant limits the virus within its phloem.High‐throughput volume electron microscopy revealed that only sieve plate pores and flexible gateways rather than plasmodesmata had a sufficiently large size exclusion limit (SEL) to accommodate virions and potentially serve as pathways of virion movement.The large SEL gateways were enriched within the proliferated sieve element (SE) layers of tumors. The lack of such connections out of the SE‐enriched regions of tumors defined a size‐dependent physical barrier to high flux transportation of virions.A working model is proposed to demonstrate the mechanism underlying limitation of virus within phloem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Additional Information
- Source:New Phytologist. 2024/01, Vol. 241, Issue 1, p343
- Document Type:Article
- Subject Area:Health and Medicine
- Publication Date:2024
- ISSN:0028-646X
- DOI:10.1111/nph.19319
- Accession Number:174066116
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