A Zinc Finger Motif in the P1 N Terminus, Highly Conserved in a Subset of Potyviruses, Is Associated with the Host Range and Fitness of Telosma Mosaic Virus

P1 is the first protein translated from the genomes of most viruses in the family Potyviridae, and it contains a C-terminal serine-protease domain that cis-cleaves the junction between P1 and HCPro in most cases. Intriguingly, P1 is the most divergent among all mature viral factors, and its roles du...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Gou, Bei, Dai, Zhaoji, Qin, Li, Wang, Yuanzheng, Liu, Haobin, Wang, Linxi, Liu, Peilan, Ran, Minyuan, Fang, Chuanying, Zhou, Tao, Shen, Wentao, Valli, Adrián, Cui, Hongguang
Tipo de recurso: artículo
Fecha de publicación:2023
País:España
Institución:Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC)
Repositorio:DIGITAL.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC
OAI Identifier:oai:digital.csic.es:10261/344612
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/344612
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:Potyviridae
Potyvirus
P1
HCPro
Zn finger motif
RNA silencing suppression
Host fitness
Telosma mosaic virus
Descripción
Sumario:P1 is the first protein translated from the genomes of most viruses in the family Potyviridae, and it contains a C-terminal serine-protease domain that cis-cleaves the junction between P1 and HCPro in most cases. Intriguingly, P1 is the most divergent among all mature viral factors, and its roles during viral infection are still far from understood. In this study, we found that telosma mosaic virus (TelMV, genus Potyvirus) in passion fruit, unlike TelMV isolates present in other hosts, has two stretches at the P1 N terminus, named N1 and N2, with N1 harboring a Zn finger motif. Further analysis revealed that at least 14 different potyviruses, mostly belonging to the bean common mosaic virus subgroup, encode a domain equivalent to N1. Using the newly developed TelMV infectious cDNA clones from passion fruit, we demonstrated that N1, but not N2, is crucial for viral infection in both Nicotiana benthamiana and passion fruit. The regulatory effects of N1 domain on P1 cis cleavage, as well as the accumulation and RNA silencing suppression (RSS) activity of its cognate HCPro, were comprehensively investigated. We found that N1 deletion decreases HCPro abundance at the posttranslational level, likely by impairing P1 cis cleavage, thus reducing HCPro-mediated RSS activity. Remarkably, disruption of the Zn finger motif in N1 did not impair P1 cis cleavage and HCPro accumulation but severely debilitated TelMV fitness. Therefore, our results suggest that the Zn finger motif in P1s plays a critical role in viral infection that is independent of P1 protease activity and self-release, as well as HCPro accumulation and silencing suppression.