Developing reverse genetics systems of northern cereal mosaic virus to reveal superinfection exclusion of two cytorhabdoviruses in barley plants

Mol Plant Pathol. 2022 May;23(5):749-756. doi: 10.1111/mpp.13188. Epub 2022 Feb 6.

Abstract

Recently, reverse genetics systems of plant negative-stranded RNA (NSR) viruses have been developed to study virus-host interactions. Nonetheless, genetic rescue of plant NSR viruses in both insect vectors and monocot plants is very limited. Northern cereal mosaic virus (NCMV), a plant cytorhabdovirus, causes severe diseases in cereal plants through transmission by the small brown planthopper (SBPH, Laodelphax striatellus) in a propagative manner. In this study, we first developed a minireplicon system of NCMV in Nicotiana benthamiana plants, and then recovered a recombinant NCMV virus (rNCMV-RFP), with a red fluorescent protein (RFP) insertion, in SBPHs and barley plants. We further used rNCMV-RFP and green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged barley yellow striate mosaic virus (rBYSMV-GFP), a closely related cytorhabdovirus, to study superinfection exclusion, a widely observed phenomenon in dicot plants rarely studied in monocot plants. Interestingly, cellular superinfection exclusion of rBYSMV-GFP and rNCMV-RFP was observed in barley leaves. Our results demonstrate that two insect-transmitted cytorhabdoviruses are enemies rather than friends at the cellular level during coinfections in plants.

Keywords: NCMV; cytorhabdovirus; monocot plants; plant negative-stranded RNA viruses; reverse genetics systems; superinfection exclusion (SIE).

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Edible Grain
  • Hordeum*
  • Mosaic Viruses* / genetics
  • Plant Diseases
  • RNA Viruses*
  • Reverse Genetics
  • Rhabdoviridae*
  • Superinfection*