4.6 Article

Persistent Southern Tomato Virus (STV) Interacts with Cucumber Mosaic and/or Pepino Mosaic Virus in Mixed- Infections Modifying Plant Symptoms, Viral Titer and Small RNA Accumulation

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9040689

Keywords

persistent virus; Amalgaviridae; synergism; antagonism; vsiRNAs; miRNAs; mixed-infections

Categories

Funding

  1. INIA research project - European Union through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) of the Generalitat Valenciana 2014-2020 [E-RTA2014-00010-C02]

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STV showed a synergistic effect with CMV or PepMV in co-infections, leading to increased virus titer and plant symptoms. However, an antagonistic interaction was observed between CMV and PepMV in co-infections, which was abolished by the presence of STV in triple-infections, restoring the CMV titer and plant symptoms. The expression of miRNAs and vsiRNAs varied depending on the virus combination, with differential regulation of important functions.
Southern tomato virus (STV) is a persistent virus that was, at the beginning, associated with some tomato fruit disorders. Subsequent studies showed that the virus did not induce apparent symptoms in single infections. Accordingly, the reported symptoms could be induced by the interaction of STV with other viruses, which frequently infect tomato. Here, we studied the effect of STV in co- and triple-infections with Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) and Pepino mosaic virus (PepMV). Our results showed complex interactions among these viruses. Co-infections leaded to a synergism between STV and CMV or PepMV: STV increased CMV titer and plant symptoms at early infection stages, whereas PepMV only exacerbated the plant symptoms. CMV and PepMV co-infection showed an antagonistic interaction with a strong decrease of CMV titer and a modification of the plant symptoms with respect to the single infections. However, the presence of STV in a triple-infection abolished this antagonism, restoring the CMV titer and plant symptoms. The siRNAs analysis showed a total of 78 miRNAs, with 47 corresponding to novel miRNAs in tomato, which were expressed differentially in the plants that were infected with these viruses with respect to the control mock-inoculated plants. These miRNAs were involved in the regulation of important functions and their number and expression level varied, depending on the virus combination. The number of vsiRNAs in STV single-infected tomato plants was very small, but STV vsiRNAs increased with the presence of CMV and PepMV. Additionally, the rates of CMV and PepMV vsiRNAs varied depending on the virus combination. The frequencies of vsiRNAs in the viral genomes were not uniform, but they were not influenced by other viruses.

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