mRNA Decapping Factors LSM1 and PAT Paralogs Are Involved in Turnip Mosaic Virus Viral Infection

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Turnip mosaic virus is a devastating potyvirus infecting many economically important brassica crops. In response to this, the plant host engages its RNA silencing machinery, involving AGO proteins, as a prominent strategy to restrain turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) infection. It has also been shown that the mRNA decay components DCP2 and VCS partake in viral infection suppression. Here, we report that the mRNA decapping components LSM1, PAT1, PATH1, and PATH2 are essential for TuMV infection. More specifically, lsm1a/lsm1b double mutants and pat1/path1/path2 triple mutants in summ2 background exhibit resistance to TuMV. Concurrently, we observed that TuMV interferes with the decapping function of LSM1 and PAT proteins as the mRNA-decay target genes UGT87A2 and ASL9 accumulate during TuMV infection. Moreover, as TuMV coat protein can be specifically found in complexes with PAT proteins but not LSM1, this suggests that TuMV "hijacks" decapping components via PAT proteins to support viral infection.[Formula: see text]

Original languageEnglish
JournalMolecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI
Volume35
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)125-130
Number of pages6
ISSN0894-0282
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

    Research areas

  • LSM1, mRNA decapping, PAT paralogs, Turnip mosaic virus

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