4.7 Article

Silencing suppressors of rice black-streaked dwarf virus and rice stripe virus hijack the 26S proteasome of Laodelphax striatellus to facilitate virus accumulation and transmission

Journal

PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 78, Issue 7, Pages 2940-2951

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/ps.6918

Keywords

rice black-streaked dwarf virus; Laodelphax striatellus; P9-1; protein interaction; 26S proteasome

Funding

  1. Jiangsu Academy of Agricultural Sciences
  2. Shandong Province Natural Science Foundation [ZR2019MC009]

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This study reveals the infection mechanism of Rice black-streaked dwarf virus (RBSDV) and rice stripe virus (RSV) in insect vectors. They promote their own accumulation and transmission by interfering with the 26S proteasome in insects, providing new insights into the virus transmission mechanism in insect vectors.
BACKGROUND Rice black-streaked dwarf virus (RBSDV) is transmitted by small brown planthopper (Laodelphax striatellus [L. striatellus]) and causes devastating disease in rice. P9-1 has silencing suppression activity and is the key protein for viroplasm formation in RBSDV-infected plants and insects; however, its exact function is poorly understood. RESULTS In this study, the P9-1 of RBSDV interacted with L. striatellus 26S proteasome subunit RPN8. RBSDV accumulation in L. striatellus increased after the 26S proteasome was disrupted by silencing the RPN8 expression. This finding indicated that L. striatellus 26S proteasome played a defense role against RBSDV infection by regulating RBSDV accumulation. Further investigations revealed that P9-1 could competitively bind to RPN8 with RPN7, thereby disrupting the assembly of 26S proteasome in L. striatellus and promoting the infection of RBSDV in insect vectors, and further affecting the transmission of the virus to rice by insect vectors. Similar to P9-1, rice stripe virus (RSV) NS2, a weak silencing suppressor, regulated virus accumulation and transmission by hijacking RPN8 to interfere with the function of 26S proteasome in L. striatellus. CONCLUSION These results suggest that viruses promote their own infection via interfering with ubiquitination pathway of insect vectors, and this mechanism might be of universal importance. These findings provide a new insight into the mechanism of virus transmission in insect vectors. (c) 2022 Society of Chemical Industry.

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