Tagging of plant potyvirus replication and movement by insertion of beta-glucuronidase into the viral polyprotein
- PMID: 1438210
- PMCID: PMC50307
- DOI: 10.1073/pnas.89.21.10208
Tagging of plant potyvirus replication and movement by insertion of beta-glucuronidase into the viral polyprotein
Abstract
Infectious RNA transcripts were generated from full-length cDNA clones of the tobacco etch potyvirus genome containing an insertion of the bacterial beta-glucuronidase (GUS) gene between the polyprotein-coding sequences for the N-terminal 35-kDa proteinase and the helper component-proteinase. The recombinant virus was able to spread systemically in plants and accumulated to a level comparable with wild-type tobacco etch potyvirus. Proteolytic processing mediated by the 35-kDa proteinase and helper component-proteinase resulted in production of an enzymatically active GUS-helper component-proteinase fusion protein. A virus passage line that retained the GUS insert after numerous plant-to-plant transfers, as well as a line that sustained a deletion of the GUS sequence, was recovered. Use of an in situ histochemical GUS assay in time-course experiments allowed the visualization of virus activity in single, mechanically inoculated leaf epidermal cells, in neighboring epidermal and mesophyll cells, in phloem-associated cells after long-distance transport, and in cells surrounding vascular tissues of organs above and below the site of inoculation. This system represents a powerful tool to study plant virus replication, short- and long-distance virus movement, and virus-host interactions. Additionally, we show that potyviruses may serve as highly efficient, autonomously replicating vectors for the expression of foreign genes in plants.
References
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
