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Three‐dimensional reconstruction and comparison of vacuolar membranes in response to viral infection

Xueting Wang, Juncai Ma, Xuejiao Jin, Ning J. Yue, Peng Gao, Keith Ka Ki, Xianbing Wang, Dawei Li, Byung‐Ho Kang, Yongliang Zhang

2020Journal of Integrative Plant Biology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The vacuole is a unique plant organelle that plays an important role in maintaining cellular homeostasis under various environmental stress conditions. However, the effects of biotic stress on vacuole structure has not been examined using three‐dimensional (3D) visualization. Here, we performed 3D electron tomography to compare the ultrastructural changes in the vacuole during infection with different viruses. The 3D models revealed that vacuoles are remodeled in cells infected with cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) or tobacco necrosis virus A Chinese isolate (TNV‐A C ), resulting in the formation of spherules at the periphery of the vacuole. These spherules contain neck‐like channels that connect their interior with the cytosol. Confocal microscopy of CMV replication proteins 1a and 2a and TNV‐A C auxiliary replication protein p23 showed that all of these proteins localize to the tonoplast. Electron microscopy revealed that the expression of these replication proteins alone is sufficient to induce spherule formation on the tonoplast, suggesting that these proteins play prominent roles in inducing vacuolar membrane remodeling. This is the first report of the 3D structures of viral replication factories built on the tonoplasts. These findings contribute to our understanding of vacuole biogenesis under normal conditions and during assembly of plant (+) RNA virus replication complexes.

Topics & Concepts

VacuoleCell biologyOrganelleCytosolBiologyViral replicationCucumber mosaic virusCytoplasmVirusPlant virusVirologyBiochemistryEnzymePlant Virus Research StudiesBacteriophages and microbial interactionsCocoa and Sweet Potato Agronomy
Three‐dimensional reconstruction and comparison of vacuolar membranes in response to viral infection | Litcius