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A plant DNA virus replicates in the salivary glands of its insect vector via recruitment of host DNA synthesis machinery

Ya‐Zhou He, Yumeng Wang, Tian-Yan Yin, Elvira Fiallo‐Olivé, Yin‐Quan Liu, Linda Hanley‐Bowdoin, Xiao‐Wei Wang

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences116 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

) vector and that replication is mainly in the salivary glands. We found that TYLCV induces DNA synthesis machinery, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and DNA polymerase δ (Polδ), to establish a replication-competent environment in whiteflies. TYLCV replication-associated protein (Rep) interacts with whitefly PCNA, which recruits DNA Polδ for virus replication. In contrast, another geminivirus, papaya leaf curl China virus (PaLCuCNV), does not replicate in the whitefly vector. PaLCuCNV does not induce DNA-synthesis machinery, and the Rep does not interact with whitefly PCNA. Our findings reveal important mechanisms by which a plant DNA virus replicates across the kingdom barrier in an insect and may help to explain the global spread of this devastating pathogen.

Topics & Concepts

InsectBiologyHost (biology)DNAVector (molecular biology)VirologySalivary glandVirusGeneticsBotanyGeneRecombinant DNABiochemistryPlant Virus Research StudiesInsect-Plant Interactions and ControlInsect symbiosis and bacterial influences
A plant DNA virus replicates in the salivary glands of its insect vector via recruitment of host DNA synthesis machinery | Litcius