4.8 Article

Salicylic acid and the viral virulence factor 2b regulate the divergent roles of autophagy during cucumber mosaic virus infection

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume 18, Issue 6, Pages 1450-1462

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2021.1987674

Keywords

CMV; host-pathogen trade-off; plant immunity; plant virus; RNA silencing; viral disease; viral effector protein; virus self-attenuation; virus transmission

Categories

Funding

  1. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation [2019-0062]
  2. EU [898053]
  3. Swedishresearchcouncil Formas [22915-000, 2016-01044]
  4. Formas [2016-01044] Funding Source: Formas
  5. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [898053] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)
  6. Vinnova [2016-01044] Funding Source: Vinnova

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Autophagy plays a crucial role in plant responses to virus infection by degrading viral components and attenuating disease symptoms. Its induction is regulated by salicylic acid and suppressed by the CMV virulence factor 2b. Autophagy provides resistance against CMV by reducing viral RNA accumulation in an RNA silencing-dependent manner.
Macroautophagy/autophagy is a conserved intracellular degradation pathway that has recently emerged as an integral part of plant responses to virus infection. The known mechanisms of autophagy range from the selective degradation of viral components to a more general attenuation of disease symptoms. In addition, several viruses are able to manipulate the autophagy machinery and counteract autophagy-dependent resistance. Despite these findings, the complex interplay of autophagy activities, viral pathogenicity factors, and host defense pathways in disease development remains poorly understood. In the current study, we analyzed the interaction between autophagy and cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) in Arabidopsis thaliana. We show that autophagy is induced during CMV infection and promotes the turnover of the major virulence protein and RNA silencing suppressor 2b. Intriguingly, autophagy induction is mediated by salicylic acid (SA) and dampened by the CMV virulence factor 2b. In accordance with 2b degradation, we found that autophagy provides resistance against CMV by reducing viral RNA accumulation in an RNA silencing-dependent manner. Moreover, autophagy and RNA silencing attenuate while SA promotes CMV disease symptoms, and epistasis analysis suggests that autophagy-dependent disease and resistance are uncoupled. We propose that autophagy counteracts CMV virulence via both 2b degradation and reduced SA-responses, thereby increasing plant fitness with the viral trade-off arising from increased RNA silencing-mediated resistance.

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