首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The amino acid sequences of the non-structural protein (molecular weight 35,000; 3a protein) from three plant viruses — cucumber mosaic, brome mosaic and alfalfa mosaic have been systematically compared using the partial genomic sequences for these three viruses already available. The 3a protein of cucumber mosaic virus has an amino acid sequence homology of 33.7% with the corresponding protein of brome mosaic virus. A similar protein from alfalfa mosaic virus has a homology of 18.2% and 14.2% with the protein from brome mosaic virus and cucumber mosaic virus, respectively. These results suggest that the three plant viruses are evolutionarily related, although, the evolutionary distance between alfalfa mosaic virus and cucumber mosaic virus or brome mosaic virus is much larger than the corresponding distance between the latter two viruses.  相似文献   

2.
Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) and brome mosaic virus (BMV) are isometric plant viruses. Although biologically distinct, they share many common chemical properties. An analysis of the partial genomic RNA sequence available for these two viruses reveals that they are evolutionarily related. Different segments of the genome exhibit different evolutionary rates. The coat proteins, which serve as carriers of genetic material, possess little or no homology. In contrast, the 3a proteins show over 35% homology. The non-coding regions of the genome also exhibit extensive but variable homology suggesting the functional importance of the nucleic acid.  相似文献   

3.
《Seminars in Virology》1993,4(6):397-405
Since 1986, research has shown that plants expressing the coat protein gene of a plant virus exhibit degrees of resistance or protection when challenge inoculated with that virus or closely related isolates. This phenomenon, called coat protein-mediated protection, sparked research efforts to develop transgenic plants that resist infection to a range of plant viruses. This report summarizes the research efforts that deal with viral coat protein gene-crop combinations of commercial potential. The viruses include tobacco mosaic, potato virus X and Y, cucumber mosaic and papaya ringspot; the crops include tomato, cucumber, tobacco and papaya.  相似文献   

4.
Although the genetic organization of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) differs considerably from that of the tripartite viruses (alfalfa mosaic virus [AlMV] and brome mosaic virus [BMV]), all of these RNA plant viruses share three domains of homology among their nonstructural proteins. One such domain, common to the AlMV and BMV 2a proteins and the readthrough portion of TMV p183, is also homologous to the readthrough protein nsP4 of Sindbis virus (Haseloff et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81:4358-4362, 1984). Two more domains are conserved among the AlMV and BMV 1a proteins and TMV p126. We show here that these domains have homology with portions of the Sindbis proteins nsP1 and nsP2, respectively. These results strengthen the view that the four viruses share mechanistic similarities in their replication strategies and may be evolutionarily related. These results also suggest that either the AlMV 1a, BMV 1a, and TMV p126 proteins are multifunctional or Sindbis proteins nsP1 and nsP2 function together as subunits in a single complex.  相似文献   

5.
Inspection of the nucleotide sequences of the RNAs complementary to the coat protein mRNAs from two plant viruses with a tripartite genome: alfalfa mosaic virus and brome mosaic virus, showed the presence of open reading frames for 138 and 118 amino acids, respectively. A third virus (cowpea chlorotic mottle virus) from the same family (1) does not show this phenomenon. This suggests that if a protein is coded for by the open reading frames it may be not essential for virus multiplication. Alternatively the open reading frames have no coding function but result from structural requirements of the RNAs.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Summary A comparison was made of the amino acid sequences of the proteins encoded by RNAs 1 and 2 of alfalfa mosaic virus (A1MV) and brome mosaic virus (BMV), and the 126K and 183K proteins encoded by tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). Three blocks of extensive homology of about 200 to 350 amino acids each were observed. Two of these blocks are located in the A1MV and BMV RNA 1 encoded proteins and the TMV encoded 126K protein; they are situated at the N-terminus and C-terminus, respectively. The third block is located in the A1MV and BMV RNA 2 encoded proteins and the C-terminal part of the TMV encoded 183K protein. These homologies are discussed with respect to the functional equivalence of these putative replicase proteins and a possible evolutionary connection between A1MV, BMV and TMV.  相似文献   

8.
The 3′ terminal sequences of RNAs 1, 2, 3 and 4 from each of the three bromoviruses (brome mosaic, cowpea chlorotic mottle and broad bean mottle viruses) and also from cucumber mosaic virus display interviral sequence similarity in addition to strong intraviral homology. Interviral similarity is much more evident when RNA secondary, rather than primary, structures are compared. The last 190 bases of the various RNAs can fold into strikingly similar, extensively base-paired secondary structures whose common features are supported by RNA structure mapping. The extreme 3′ end of each viral RNA can base-pair in two distinct configurations. Bromovirus RNA 3s each contain an unusually accessible internal oligo(A) sequence which, in brome mosaic virus at least, is located in the intercistronic noncoding region. Functional implications of these structural features are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Each of the two largest brome mosaic virus RNAs, RNA1 and RNA2, directs the synthesis of a large protein in cell-free extracts derived from wheat embryo. The size of each protein represents the translation of almost the entire length of the corresponding RNA. It was shown previously that brome mosaic virus RNA4 directs the synthesis of the coat protein and that brome mosaic virus RNA3, although it also contains the coat protein cistron, is translated mostly into a single product unrelated to the coat protein (Shih & Kaesberg, 1973). Thus, the brome mosaic virus genome encodes a total of four proteins.  相似文献   

10.
The nucleotide sequences of the subgenomic coat protein messengers (RNA4's) of two related bromoviruses, brome mosaic virus (BMV) and cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV), have been determined by direct RNA and CDNA sequencing without cloning. BMV RNA4 is 876 b long including a 5' noncoding region of nine nucleotides and a 3' noncoding region of 300 nucleotides. CCMV RNA 4 is 824 b long, including a 5' noncoding region of 10 nucleotides and a 3' noncoding region of 244 nucleotides. The encoded coat proteins are similar in length (188 amino acids for BMV and 189 amino acids for CCMV) and display about 70% homology in their amino acid sequences. Length difference between the two RNAs is due mostly to a single deletion, in CCMV with respect to BMV, of about 57 b immediately following the coding region. Allowing for this deletion the RNAs are indicate that mutations leading to divergence were constrained in the coding region primarily by the requirement of maintaining a favorable coat protein structure and in the 3' noncoding region primarily by the requirement of maintaining a favorable RNA spatial configuration.  相似文献   

11.
The binding of sodium dodecyl sulfate to coat protein subunits of cucumber green mottle mosaic virus and tobacco mosaic virus was studied by equilibrium dialysis. The amount of dodecyl sulfate bound to the cucumber virus protein in 0.1 m phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) was found to be 1.55 g/g, which was the same value as that obtained with the tobacco virus protein. The presence of 8 m urea markedly decreased the degree of binding of dodecyl sulfate to the proteins. The amount of binding to the cucumber virus protein was reduced to 0.56 g/g, and that to the tobacco virus protein decreased to 0.8 g/g. The net charges of both proteins were negative at neutral pH and the amount of negative charge of the cucumber virus protein, obtained from the potentiometric titration curves, was larger than that of the tobacco virus protein, either in the native state or in the denatured state. In dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis the cucumber virus protein migrated faster than the tobacco virus protein. On the other hand, in the presence of 8 m urea, the electrophoretic migration rate of the cucumber virus protein was equal to that of the tobacco virus protein. Sedimentation equilibrium experiments in 6 m guanidinium chloride gave molecular weights of 17,700 and 17,200 for the tobacco mosaic virus and the cucumber virus proteins, respectively. These results suggest that the effective negative charge density of the cucumber virus protein-dodecyl sulfate complex is higher than that of the tobacco virus proteindodecyl sulfate complex in 0.1% dodecyl sulfate solution. The conformation of both proteins was investigated by circular dichroism measurements. Both proteins have a slightly higher degree of α-helix content in dodecyl sulfate solution than in the native state. The addition of 8 m urea to both proteins while in this solution induced a change in conformation to one having a much smaller degree of ordered structure, although the change in the cucumber virus protein was more intense than that in the tobacco virus protein.  相似文献   

12.
A chimeric gene encoding the alfalfa mosaic virus (AlMV) coat protein was constructed and introduced into tobacco and tomato plants using Ti plasmid-derived plant transformation vectors. The progeny of the self-fertilized transgenic plants were significantly delayed in symptom development and in some cases completely escaped infection after inoculated with AlMV. The inoculated leaves of the transgenic plants had significantly reduced numbers of lesions and accumulated substantially lower amounts of coat protein due to virus replication than the control plants. These results show that high level expression of the chimeric viral coat protein gene confers protection against AlMV, which differs from other plant viruses in morphology, genome structure, gene expression strategy and early steps in viral replication. Based on our results with AlMV and those reported earlier for tobacco mosaic virus, it appears that genetically engineered cross-protection may be a general method for preventing viral disease in plants.  相似文献   

13.
The application of a small-scale method for the preparation of antibodies specific for coat proteins of simple plant viruses is described. The method entails the preparative electrophoresis of crude virion extracts, electrophoretic transfer of the resolved proteins onto nitrocellulose paper, excision of a specific protein band, and the attachment and subsequent elution of antibodies specific for the excised protein. The method was tested with brome mosaic virus (BMV) and low molecular weight plantproteins. It was possible to produce antibodies from multiply-reactive sera that reacted only with the proteins used to purify them. Antibodies eluted from BMV coat protein monomer reacted strongly with intact virus in indirect ELISA. Other possible applications of the technique to plant virology are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
《Seminars in Virology》1993,4(6):339-347
Transformation of a plant with a DNA sequence derived from a gene encoding a viral replicase can endow it with a high level of resistance to the virus. To date, plants have been made resistant to tobacco mosaic virus, pea early browning virus, cucumber mosaic virus and potato virus X. It is considered that expression of replicase-derived sequences at the protein level interferes with normal functioning and/or assembly of viral replicase enzyme complexes leading to a general, marked inhibition of viral replication in the cells of these transgenic plants. Analogous studies of animal viruses in tissues culture cells indicate that mutants of viral-encoded replication-associated proteins can act as inhibitors of virus replication. This paper discusses the present status and future prospects for the control of virus disease using sequences derived from viral genes encoding replicase and replication-associated proteins.  相似文献   

15.
The structure of an intact tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) particle was determined at 2.9 A resolution using fibre diffraction methods. All residues of the coat protein and the three nucleotides of RNA that are bound to each protein subunit were visible in the electron density map. Examination of the structures of TMV, cucumber green mottle mosaic virus and ribgrass mosaic virus, and site-directed mutagenesis experiments in which carboxylate groups were changed to the corresponding amides, showed that initial stages of disassembly are driven by complex electrostatic interactions involving at least seven carboxylate side-chains and a phosphate group. The locations of these interactions can drift during evolution, allowing the viruses to evade plant defensive responses that depend on recognition of the viral coat protein surface.  相似文献   

16.
The nucleotide sequence of the 3389 residues of RNA 1 (Mr 1.15 X 10(6) of the Q strain of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) was determined, completing the primary structure of the CMV genome (8617 nucleotides). CMV RNA 1 was sequenced by the dideoxy-chain-termination method using M13 clones carrying RNA 1 sequences as well as synthetic oligonucleotide primers on RNA 1 as a template. At the 5' end of the RNA there are 97 noncoding residues between the cap structure and the first AUG (98-100), which is the start of a single long open-reading frame. This reading frame encodes a translation product of 991 amino acid residues (Mr 110791) and stops 319 nucleotide residues from the 3' end of RNA 1. In addition to the conserved 3' region present in all CMV RNAs (307 residues in RNA 1), RNAs 1 and 2 have highly homologous 5' leader sequences, a 12-nucleotide segment of which is also conserved in the corresponding RNAs of brome mosaic virus (BMV). CMV satellite RNA can form stable base pairs with a region of CMV RNAs 1 and 2 including this 12-nucleotide sequence, implying a regulatory function. This conserved sequence is part of a hairpin structure in RNAs 1 and 2 of CMV and BMV and in CMV satellite RNA. The entire translation products of RNA 1 of CMV and BMV could be aligned with significant homology. Less prominent homologies were found with alfalfa mosaic virus RNA 1 translation product and with tobacco mosaic virus Mr-126000 protein.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction in vitro of the RNA of the Q-strain of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) with its satellite RNA (sat-RNA) has been studied. In hybridisation reactions containing 30% formamide at 45 degrees, sat-RNA binds to CMV RNA 3 and 4 but not to CMV RNA 1 and 2 or RNA from tobacco mosaic virus and alfalfa mosaic virus. The viral coat protein gene present in RNA 3 and 4 contains the site of binding but this region does not contain complementary sequences of any significant length to the sat-RNA sequence. However, the optimum alignment of short complementary sequences present in these regions revealed a stable structure in which it is proposed that sat-RNA twists around the coat protein gene so that two separate blocks of nucleotides in sat-RNA base pair in opposite directions with two adjacent blocks in the coat protein gene to form a knot-like structure. The binding site is a region of 33 nucleotides within the coding region of the coat protein gene which base pairs with residues 98-113 and 134-152 of sat-RNA. The possibility of the binding region of sat-RNA functioning as an "anti-sense" sequence in regulation of the viral coat protein synthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The name anemone mosaic is proposed for a previously unrecorded virus disease of Anemone coronaria L.; infected plants have mottled leaves, and broken and distorted flowers. This virus can cause winter browning, and can contribute to crinkle in anemones.
The virus infected forty-seven out of ninety plant species tested; it was transmitted by mechanical inoculation, and by four of the six aphid species tested. Most aphids ceased to be infective within 30 min. when continuing to feed after leaving an infected plant.
Properties in vitro varied according to conditions of the tests; the thermal inactivation point was always below 62°C., the dilution end-point did not exceed 1/2500, and the virus inactivated at 18°C., the fewer than 72 hr.
Intracellular inclusion bodies were produced in all hosts examined.
Anemone mosaic virus is very similar to viruses placed in the turnip virus 1 group of Hoggan & Johnson, and is serologically related to cabbage black ringspot virus, although AMV infection did not protect plants against infection with cabbage black ring-spot virus.
Weeds naturally infected with AMV were found in anemone plantations, and this virus was detected, together with cucumber mosaic and tobacco necrosis viruses, in corms imported into this country.  相似文献   

19.
The expression of viral coat protein (CP) in transgenic plants has been shown to be very effective in virus plant protection. However, the introduction of CP genes into plants presents the potential risk of the encapsidation of a superinfecting viral genome in the transgenic protein, an event which could change the epidemiology of the disease. To detect the potential heterologous encapsidation of the cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) genome by alfalfa mosaic virus (AIMV) CP expressed in transgenic tobacco plants, a system of immunocapture (IC) and amplification by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was optimized. This provided high sensitivity and reliable selection of the heterologously encapsidated CMV genome in the presence of natural CMV particles. As little as 2 pg of virus could be detected by immunocapture/polymerase chain reaction (IC/PCR) technique. Evidence for heterologous encapsidation of the CMV genome was found in 11 of the 33 transgenic plants tested two weeks after CMV inoculation. This demonstrates a significant rate of heterologous encapsidation events between two unrelated viruses in transgenic plants. Since CP is involved in the interactions of the virus particle with its vector, the release in the field of such transgenic plants could alter the transmission properties of some important viruses.  相似文献   

20.
Four sap-transmissible viruses were isolated from cultivated Solanaceae in Trinidad: (1) tobacco mosaic virus, from tobacco, tomato and sweet pepper; (2) cucumber mosaic virus, from tobacco and petunia; (3) 'pepper vein-banding virus', probably related to pepper mosaic viruses in Puerto Rico and Brazil, from peppers and tobacco; (4) 'egg-plant mosaic virus', possibly related to the tobacco ring-spot virus, from egg-plant and tomato. Pepper vein-banding virus causes leaf-crinkling and vein-banding in Physalis floridana , petunia, various Nicotiana spp. and most peppers; the Large Bell Hot pepper is killed; tomato and egg-plant are immune. Egg-plant mosaic virus produces mosaic, ring-spotting, or both, on different solanaceous species. It also gives local and systemic ring-spotting on Chenopodium hybridum and necrotic local lesions on the primary leaves of cowpea (var. Black-eye); cucumber is a symptomless carrier. Only cucumber mosaic virus was found naturally infecting non-solanaceous hosts, cucumber and certain common wild plants.
The thermal inactivation point of pepper vein-banding virus is 62° C, its dilution end-point 2×10-5 and its longevity in vitro 6 day s at 23–30° C.; corresponding values for egg-plant mosaic virus are 78° C., 10-6 and over 3 weeks. Aphisgossypii transmits cucumber mosaic and pepper vein-banding, but not egg-plant mosaic, of which Epitrix sp. is an occasional vector. Tobacco mosaic, as elsewhere, probably has no regular insect vectors in Trinidad.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号