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1.
Sindelár L  Sindelárová M 《Planta》2002,215(5):862-869
Changes in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6P DH; EC 1.1.1.49) activity caused by infection of tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum L.) leaves with potato virus Y (PVY), cucumber mosaic virus, potato virus X, tobacco rattle virus and turnip mosaic virus, the subcellular localisation of G6P DH isozymes in mesophyll protoplasts derived from healthy and PVY-infected tobacco leaves, as well as G6P DH control and the relationship of its isozymes with the degree of tobacco resistance to PVY multiplication, were studied. The activities of G6P DH were markedly increased in locally and systemically infected leaves and the time courses of the activity linearly correlated with those of virus multiplication. In leaves infected with PVY, the activity time courses of the crude and the partially purified G6P DH were coincident. This probably indicates the involvement of coarse regulation of the enzyme. PVY content linearly correlated with enhanced G6P DH activity in leaf discs derived from susceptible, tolerant and resistant cultivars of tobacco. The increased activity of the enzyme in infected protoplasts and plant tissues was predominantly caused by the increased activity of chloroplastic isozymes. This was confirmed by the specific staining of isozymes after electrophoretic separation of chloroplastic proteins of tobacco leaves. These findings enable the degree of resistance to virus multiplication to be quantified for the use of gene manipulation and breeding.  相似文献   

2.
The changes in the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) (EC 1.1.1.49) and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGDH) (EC 1.1.1.44) in leaf tissues and the subcellular localisation of their isozymes in protoplasts derived from healthy and potato virus Y (PVY) infected plants of Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Samsun were determined. The activities of G6PDH and 6PGDH were markedly increased in virus-infected leaves during the acute phase of infection both in crude homogenate and partial purificate (when compared with the values found in healthy control plants) and correlated with the multiplication curve of PVY. Intact chloroplasts and soluble cytosolic proteins were obtained from whole plants upon the culmination of the multiplication curve of PVY and upon the enhancement of the activity of both dehydrogenases by means of differential centrifugation of broken protoplasts. The chloroplastic fraction from infected protoplasts (based on chlorophyll content or NADP+-triosephosphate dehydrogenase activity) showed an enhanced activity of G6PDH (1.81 times that of healthy protoplasts), and 6PGDH (1.77 times). Cytosol from infected protoplasts (based on phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity) contained only slightly enhanced activities of G6PDH and 6PGDH (only 1.26 and 1.16 times, respectively).  相似文献   

3.
Effects of the superinfection with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) on susceptible tobacco plants infected with potato virus Y (PVY) were determined. Dynamic changes in the TMV and/or PVY contents, the ribonucleases (RNases), the phosphomonoesterase (PME), the phosphodiesterase (PDE) and the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6P DH) activities were studied. The PVY infection caused a substantial reduction in the multiplication of TMV. The content of TMV in the PVY inoculated leaves amounts to 6 and 9 % in the PVY systemically infected leaves when compared with single TMV. Surprisingly, the challenging virus (TMV) enhanced the content of inducing virus (PVY) in the locally inoculated leaves up to 130 – 141 %. In contrast, the reduction of PVY content down to 35 – 40 % by TMV was seen in the PVY systemically infected leaves. The activities of the RNase, the PME, the PDE and the G6P DH were increased (when compared with the healthy plants) during the acute phase of single virus multiplication (PVY or TMV). The increase in the activities of the enzymes in the leaves with mixed infection was at least as high as the sum of the increases of single infections. Moreover, a higher increase than the sum was seen for G6P DH and PDE (by about 20 – 35 %). This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

4.
The ratio of activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (G6P DH/6PG DH), and the contents of glucose-6-phosphate (G6P), 6-phosphogluconate (6PG) and fructose-6-phosphate (F6P) were studied at various stages of potato virus Y (PVY) multiplication in Nicotiana tabacum cv. Samsun. G6P DH/6PG DH increased through the experiment from 0.42 to 0.53 in leaves of healthy tobacco, and up to 0.59 in PVY systemically infected leaves. However, these ratios in the ruptured protoplast preparations, and the chloroplast and cytosol fractions of healthy protoplasts were similar to that from infected ones. The ratio lower than 1, found in the healthy and/or PVY- infected leaf tissues and in the infected protoplasts as well, confirms the assumption that G6P DH is the control enzyme of oxidative pentosephosphate pathway not only in the healthy but also in the infected plants. The contents of G6P, 6PG and F6P in the period of the highest PVY multiplication were strongly decreased (to 30 – 50 % when compared with control healthy leaves) and were negatively correlated with the G6P DH and 6PG DH activities.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of the infection with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) and potato virus Y (PVY) on chloroplasts from susceptible tobacco plants were determined. Changes in ribonucleases (RNases), phosphomonoesterase (PME), phosphodiesterase (PDE), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6P DH), 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PG DH), glucokinase (GK), and fructokinase (FK) activities in thylakoid/envelope and stroma fractions were studied. Slight increase in the activities of PME, PDE, G6P DH and 6PG DH of thylakoid/envelope fraction as well as of RNases, PME, PDE, G6P DH, 6PG DH, GK and FK of stroma fraction was found in chloroplasts isolated from leaf tissues infected with PVY. Infection with TMV produced higher increase in enzymes activities in chloroplasts; especially, PME, G6P DH and 6PG DH in fraction of thylakoid/envelope, and RNases, PME, PDE, G6P DH, 6PG DH, and GK in stroma fraction.This study was supported by grant No. 522/02/0708 of the Grant Agency of the Czech Republic.  相似文献   

6.
The reaction of several cultivated potato varieties (Solarium tuberosum L.) to three strains of tobacco etch potyvirus (TEV-F, TEV-Mex21 and TEV-ATCC) and the reaction of several pepper lines (Capsicum annuum L. and C. chinense L.) to two strains of potato Y potyvirus (PVYO and PVYN) and one strain of potato A potyvirus (PVA-M) was tested. The potato varieties included in this study carried resistance genes against PVY, PVA and potato V potyvirus, but all were susceptible to TEV and developed mottle and mosaic symptoms. TEV was readily transmitted by mechanical inoculation from tobacco and potato to potato, whereas transmission from pepper to potato occurred infrequently. TEV was transmitted through potato tubers, and from pepper to potato plants by aphids. Lack of detectable systemic infection following graft-inoculation indicated extreme resistance to PVYO and PVA in several pepper lines. No pepper line was systemically infected with PVYN following mechanical inoculation (graft-inoculation was not carried out with PVYN). The development of necrotic lesions following mechanical and graft-inoculation indicated hypersensitive response to PVYO in several pepper lines which resembled the resistance responses to these potyvirus strains in potato. Results of this study together with previous work indicate that C. annuum cv. Avelar is resistant to four potyviruses [PVY, PVA, pepper mottle potyvirus (PepMoV) and some isolates of TEV]; C. annuum cv. Criollo de Morelos and C. chinense PI 152225 and PI 159236 are resistant to three potyviruses (PVY, PepMoV and PVA; and PVY, PepMoV and TEV, respectively); C. annuum 9093–1 and 92016–1 are resistant to PVY and PepMoV; and C. annuum cv. Jupiter and C. annuum cv. RNaky are resistant to PVYN and PVA.  相似文献   

7.
Plants of several potato clones with major gene resistance to potato virus Y (PVY) developed necrotic local lesions and systemic necrosis after manual inoculation with common (PVYo) or veinal necrosis (PVYN) strains of the virus. The clones reacted similarly, although their resistance genes are thought to be derived from four different wild species of Solarium. Mesophyll protoplasts from each clone became infected when inoculated with RNA of PVYo by the polyethylene glycol method. The proportion of protoplasts infected, assessed by staining with fluorescent antibody to virus particles, was similar to that of protoplasts of susceptible potato cultivars. In contrast, plants of potato cultivars Corine and Pirola, which possess gene Ry from S. stoloniferum, developed few or no symptoms when manually inoculated or grafted with PVYo. Moreover, only very few protoplasts of these cultivars produced virus particle antigen after inoculation with PVYo RNA. The extreme resistance to PVY of cvs Corine and Pirola was therefore expressed by inoculated protoplasts whereas the resistance of the necrotic-reacting potato clones was not.  相似文献   

8.
Potato production is one of the most important agricultural sectors, and it is challenged by various detrimental factors, including virus infections. To control losses in potato production, knowledge about the virus—plant interactions is crucial. Here, we investigated the molecular processes in potato plants as a result of Potato virus Y (PVY) infection, the most economically important potato viral pathogen. We performed an integrative study that links changes in the metabolome and gene expression in potato leaves inoculated with the mild PVYN and aggressive PVYNTN isolates, for different times through disease development. At the beginning of infection (1 day post-inoculation), virus-infected plants showed an initial decrease in the concentrations of metabolites connected to sugar and amino-acid metabolism, the TCA cycle, the GABA shunt, ROS scavangers, and phenylpropanoids, relative to the control plants. A pronounced increase in those metabolites was detected at the start of the strong viral multiplication in infected leaves. The alterations in these metabolic pathways were also seen at the gene expression level, as analysed by quantitative PCR. In addition, the systemic response in the metabolome to PVY infection was analysed. Systemic leaves showed a less-pronounced response with fewer metabolites altered, while phenylpropanoid-associated metabolites were strongly accumulated. There was a more rapid onset of accumulation of ROS scavengers in leaves inoculated with PVYN than those inoculated with PVYNTN. This appears to be related to the lower damage observed for leaves of potato infected with the milder PVYN strain, and at least partially explains the differences between the phenotypes observed.  相似文献   

9.
Surveys were made for the presence of potato virus Y (PVY) in the planted seed and harvested tubers in ware potato crops of cv. Record grown at three sites in England in 1994 (survey 1) and seven sites in 1995 (survey 2). PVY was not found in samples of planted seed, but high levels of infection were found in many, but not all, harvested crops. However, plants of volunteer potatoes (VP) (i.e. plants arising from tubers or true seed derived from previous crops and surviving in the soil) were frequently found to be infected. Infection in tubers harvested from crops in the first survey ranged from 2–52%. In 1995, VP were collected from two of the three English sites where potato crops had been grown the previous season and also from a site in Scotland where PVY infection in an experimental crop of cv. Record had been monitored in 1994. The percentages of infected VP ranged from 2–54%. PVYN was the predominant strain found in sampled VP, with only two plants (out of 300 infected) containing PVYO. In the second survey, VP were assessed within the 1995 ware crops and were found at four sites, at which they comprised between 4–8% of emerged potato plants. Between 31–93% of VP were infected. Again, PVYN was the predominant strain with one plant containing PVYO and another PVYC (out of 189 infected). A sample of harvested tubers from each site was also tested for PVY. At those sites which had many infected VP, the harvested crop contained a large percentage of infected tubers, ranging from 60–97%. Two sites which had not previously been used for cropping potatoes had no VP and a very low incidence of PVY infection in the harvested tubers (1% and 2%). However, although no VP were found at one site, 31% of harvested tubers were infected, suggesting that alternative inoculum sources may be important.  相似文献   

10.
Hypersensitive resistance (HR) is an efficient defense strategy in plants that restricts pathogen growth and can be activated during host as well as non-host interactions. HR involves programmed cell death and manifests itself in tissue collapse at the site of pathogen attack. A novel hypersensitivity gene, Ny-1, for resistance to Potato virus Y (PVY) was revealed in potato cultivar Rywal. This is the first gene that confers HR in potato plants both to common and necrotic strains of PVY. The locus Ny-1 mapped on the short arm of potato chromosome IX, where various resistance genes are clustered in Solanaceous genomes. Expression of HR was temperature-dependent in cv. Rywal. Strains PVYO and PVYN, including subgroups PVYNW and PVYNTN, were effectively localized when plants were grown at 20°C. At 28°C, plants were systemically infected but no symptoms were observed. In field trials, PVY was restricted to the inoculated leaves and PVY-free tubers were produced. Therefore, the gene Ny-1 can be useful for potato breeding as an alternative donor of PVY resistance, because it is efficacious in practice-like resistance conferred by Ry genes.  相似文献   

11.
Changes in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, ribonucleases activities and chlorophyll content were studied in leaves of plants systemically infected by potato virus Y, necrotic strain (PVYN). Potato cultivars Jara and Adretta differing in resistance to potato virus Y were used. No statistically significant differences were observed between healthy and infected plants of both cultivars in chlorophyll content. Activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase slowly increased in connection with virus multiplication and reached 203.4% of the values of non-infected control in susceptible cv. Jara and 160.4% in the resistant cv. Adretta. Differences between cultivars were significant from 60 d after inoculation (P≤0.05). The activity of ribonucleases quickly increased in the initial period of the experiment and then slowly decreased. Their activities reached 195.6% in susceptible cultivar and 183.5% in the resistant one. Significant differences (P≤0.01) between susceptible and resistant cultivars was found from 18 to 35 d after inoculation. The activities of enzymes corresponded to PVYN multiplication which was since 40 d considerably higher (P<0.01) in susceptible cultivar in comparison with the resistant one. Thus the activities of studied enzymes could be considered as markers of resistance of potato cultivars to PVYN multiplication.  相似文献   

12.
In this study we applied RNA silencing to engineer potato plants that are resistant to potato virus Y (PVY). We expressed double-stranded (ds) RNA derived from the 3 terminal part of the coat protein gene of PVY, which is highly conserved in sequence amongst different PVY isolates, in transgenic potatoes of the commercial variety Spunta. Transgenic plants were analyzed for generation of transgene-derived short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) prior to virus inoculation. Twelve of fifteen transgenic lines produced siRNAs and were highly resistant to three strains of PVY, each belonging to three different subtypes of the virus (PVYN, PVYO and PVYNTN). Infection of transgenic plants with Potato virus X (PVX) simultaneously or prior to the challenge with PVY did not interfere with PVY-resistance.Anastasia Missiou: M.A. and K.K. have contributed equally to this workKriton Kalantidis: M.A. and K.K. have contributed equally to this work  相似文献   

13.
Changes in ribonucleases (RNases), phosphomonoesterase (PME), phosphodiesterase (PDE), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6P DH), polyphenoloxidases, peroxidases and proteases activity and PR-proteins composition in leaf tissue and intercellular fluid (ICF) isolated from leaf tissue of healthy and TMV-infected hypersensitive tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Xanthi-nc) plants (non-inoculated leaves) were studied. The amount of the proteins and the enzymes of intercellular space was less than 3 % of the total amount of proteins and the enzymes found in homogenate of healthy leaves. The TMV infection did not significantly change this observation. The great increase in the activities of the enzymes was observed in homogenates of the infected leaves, especially of the enzymes involved in biosynthesis of precursors needed for virus multiplication (G6P DH, RNase, PME, PDE). This is in contrast with the activities of the enzymes of ICF, which were only partly increased. The ICF proteins of infected plants were separated by means of ion exchange chromatography on DEAE cellulose. The isozymes of peroxidase, polyphenoloxidase, PME and PDE were identified. Using discontinuous nondenaturating polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of DEAE cellulose fractions, the detection of isozymes of peroxidases and PR-proteins was performed. By means of SDS-PAGE the molecular masses of PR-proteins were identified: 15 – 16 kDa (group 1), 27 – 28 kDa (group 3: chitinases) and 36 – 40 kDa (group 2a: -1,3-glucanases).  相似文献   

14.
Coat protein-mediated resistance (CPMR), resistance conferred as a result of the expression of viral coat proteins in transgenic plants, has been illustrated to be an effective way of protecting plants against several plant viruses. Nonetheless, consistent protection has not been achieved for transgenic plants expressing the coat protein of potato virus Y (PVY), the type member of the potyvirus family. In this report, three different potato cultivars were transformed with a chimeric construct consisting of the capsid protein (CP) coding sequences of PVY flanked by the AUG codon and the translational enhancer from the coat protein gene of potato virus X (PVX). These cultivars were shown to express high levels of PVY CP and confer a high degree of protection against PVYo and PVYN under both greenhouse and field conditions. In addition, transgenic plants infected with potato virus A (PVA), a related potyvirus, exhibited a delay in virus accumulation, which could be easily overcome with increasing virus concentrations. Received: 26 October 1995 / Accepted: 14 June 1996  相似文献   

15.
Potato plants cv. Rywal with hypersensitivity gene Ny-1 infected with PVYN or PVYNTN reacted in local necroses 3 days after infection. Potato virus Y (PVY) particles were found in epidermis, mesophyll, phloem and xylem cells in inoculated leaves. Noncapsidated virus particles (without capsid protein) were observed already 10 h after infection by using electron microscopy in situ. Capsid protein on one terminus of noncapsidated virus particles was located 5 days after inoculation with the use of immunogold labeling method. Whereas cytoplasmic inclusions were observed for the first time 24 days after infection during hypersensitive response. Ultrastructural studies showed that ER may take part in PVY RNA replication and capsidation of Potyvirus particles. Observed cytopathological changes and virus particles indicate that cell nucleus and mitochondrion might participate in PVY life cycle. During hypersensitive response PVY particles were found in plasmodesmata as well as in phloem and xylem.  相似文献   

16.
Potato virus Y (PVY, genus Potyvirus, family Potyviridae) causes high economic losses worldwide, especially in the production of seed potatoes (Solanum tuberosum). PVY control systems rely on measuring virus pressure and vector pressure in the field. Calculation of the vector pressure is based on the relative efficiency factors (REFs) of aphid species. These REFs express the transmission efficiency of aphid species in relation to the transmission efficiency of Myzus persicae, the most efficient vector of PVY. In this paper, we report on the determination of aphids' relative transmission efficiency factors (REFs) for isolates of the PVY strains PVYN, PVYNTN and PVYN-Wi. Biotype Mp2 of M. persicae was tested for its transmission efficiency for six PVY isolates (one PVYN, three PVYNTN and two PVYN-Wi isolates) and showed comparable average transmission efficiencies for all isolates. The transmission rate of this biotype for the six PVY isolates was set to 1 and Mp2 was used as an internal control in transmission experiments to determine the REFs of three other biotypes of M. persicae and 16 other aphid species (three biotypes per species when available) for the six PVY isolates. Comparing the calculated REFs for PVYN with the REFs reported in the previous century for PVYN, we observe overall comparable REFs, except for Aphis fabae, Aphis spp., Hyperomyzus lactucae, Macrosiphum euphorbiae and Rhopalosiphum padi, which have a lower REF in our experiments, and Aphis frangulae and Phorodon humuli, which have now a higher REF. Comparing the new REFs found for the PVYNTN strains with the new REFs for PVYN, we observe that they are overall comparable, except for A. frangulae (0.17 compared with 0.53) and Schizaphis graminum (0.05 compared with 0.00). Comparing the REFs calculated for PVYN-Wi with those calculated for PVYN, we can observe six aphid species with higher REFs (Acyrthosiphon pisum, A. fabae, Aphis nasturtii, Aphis spp., P. humuli and R. padi). Only the species A. frangulae shows a lower REF for PVYN-Wi compared with the transmission efficiency of PVYN. Three aphid species (Aulacorthum solani, Myzus ascalonicus and S. graminum) for which no REF was determined earlier were found to be capable to transmit PVY and their REFs were determined.  相似文献   

17.
The potato cv. Igor is susceptible to infection with Potato virus Y (PVY) and in Slovenia it has been so severely affected with NTN isolates of PVY causing potato tuber necrotic ringspot disease (PTNRD) that its cultivation has ceased. Plants of cv. Igor were transformed with two transgenes that contained coat protein gene sequence of PVYNTN. Both transgenes used PVY sequence in a sense (+) orientation, one in native translational context (N‐CP), and one with a frame‐shift mutation (FS‐CP). Although most transgenic lines were susceptible to infection with PVYNTN and PVYO, several lines showed resistance that could be classified into two types. Following manual or graft inoculation, plants of partially resistant lines developed some symptoms in foliage and tubers, and virus titre in the foliage, estimated by ELISA, was low or undetectable. In highly resistant (R) lines, symptoms did not develop in foliage and on tubers, and virus could not be detected in foliage by ELISA or infectivity assay. Four lines from 34 tested (two N‐CP and two FS‐CP) were R to PVYNTN and PVYO and one additional line was R to PVYO. When cv. Spey was transformed with the same constructs, they did not confer strong resistance to PVYO.  相似文献   

18.
Hypersensitive resistance (HR) to strains O and C of Potato virus Y (PVY, genus Potyvirus) is conferred by potato genes Nytbr and Nctbr, respectively; however, PVY N strains overcome these resistance genes. The viral helper component proteinases (HCpro, 456 amino acids) from PVYN and PVYO are distinguished by an eight‐amino‐acid signature sequence, causing HCpro to fold into alternative conformations. Substitution of only two residues (K269R and R270K) of the eight‐amino‐acid signature in PVYN HCpro was needed to convert the three‐dimensional (3D) model of PVYN HCpro to a PVYO‐like conformation and render PVYN avirulent in the presence of Nytbr, whereas four amino acid substitutions were necessary to change PVYO HCpro to a PVYN‐like conformation. Hence, the HCpro conformation rather than other features ascribed to the sequence were essential for recognition by Nytbr. The 3D model of PVYC HCpro closely resembled PVYO, but differed from PVYN HCpro. HCpro of all strains was structurally similar to β‐catenin. Sixteen PVYN605‐based chimeras were inoculated to potato cv. Pentland Crown (Nytbr), King Edward (Nctbr) and Pentland Ivory (Nytbr/Nctbr). Eleven chimeras induced necrotic local lesions and caused no systemic infection, and thus differed from both parental viruses that infected King Edward systemically, and from PVYN605 that infected Pentland Crown and Pentland Ivory systemically. These 11 chimeras triggered both Nytbr and Nctbr and, in addition, six induced veinal necrosis in tobacco. Further, specific amino acid residues were found to have an additive impact on necrosis. These results shed new light on the causes of PVY‐related necrotic symptoms in potato.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Potato virus Y (PVY) strains are transmitted by different aphid species in a non‐persistent, non‐circulative manner. Green peach aphid (GPA), Myzus persicae Sulzer, is the most efficient vector in laboratory studies, but potato aphid (PA), Macrosiphum euphorbiae Thomas (both Hemiptera: Aphididae, Macrosiphini), and bird cherry‐oat aphid (BCOA), Rhopalosiphum padi L. (Hemiptera: Aphididae, Aphidini), also contribute to PVY transmission. Studies were conducted with GPA, PA, and BCOA to assess PVY transmission efficiency for various isolates of the same strain. Treatments included three PVY strains (PVYO, PVYN:O, PVYNTN) and two isolates of each strain (Oz and NY090031 for PVYO; Alt and NY090004 for PVYN:O; N4 and NY090029 for PVYNTN), using each of three aphid species as well as a sham inoculation. Virus‐free tissue‐cultured plantlets of potato cv. Russet Burbank were used as virus source and recipient plants. Five weeks post inoculation, recipient plants were tested with quantitative DAS‐ELISA to assess infection percentage and virus titer. ELISA‐positive recipient plants were assayed with RT‐PCR to confirm presence of the expected strains. Transmission efficiency (percentage infection of plants) was highest for GPA, intermediate for BCOA, and lowest for PA. For all aphid species, transmission efficiency did not differ significantly between isolates within each strain. No correlations were found among source plant titer, infection percentage, and recipient plant titer. For both GPA and BCOA, isolates of PVYNTN were transmitted with greatest efficiency followed by isolates of PVYO and PVYN:O, which might help explain the increasing prevalence of necrotic strains in potato‐growing regions. Bird cherry‐oat aphid transmitted PVY with higher efficiency than previously reported, suggesting that this species is more important to PVY epidemiology than has been considered.  相似文献   

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