Comparative Plant Transcriptome Profiling of Arabidopsis thaliana Col-0 and Camelina sativa var. <i>Celine</i> Infested with Myzus persicae Aphids Acquiring Circulative and Noncirculative Viruses Reveals Virus- and Plant-Specific Alterations Relevant to Aphid Feeding Behavior and Transmission
Quentin Chesnais, Victor Golyaev, Amandine Velt, Camille Rustenholz, Véronique Brault, Mikhail M. Pooggin, Martin Drucker
Abstract
Plant viruses change the phenotype of their plant hosts. Some of the changes impact interactions of the plant with insects that feed on the plants and transmit these viruses. These modifications may result in better virus transmission. We examine here the transcriptomes of two plant species infected with two viruses with different transmission modes to work out whether there are plant species-specific and transmission mode-specific transcriptome changes. Our results show that both are the case.
Topics & Concepts
BiologyMyzus persicaeCamelina sativaArabidopsis thalianaCamelinaTranscriptomePlant virusBotanyVirologyVirusGeneticsBiotechnologyCropAgronomyGeneGene expressionAphidMutantPlant Virus Research StudiesInsect-Plant Interactions and ControlPlant Parasitism and Resistance