Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (Dec 2012)

Tobacco etch virus Infectivity in Capsicum Spp. Is Determined by a Maximum of Three Amino Acids in the Viral Virulence Determinant VPg

  • Kari Perez,
  • Inhwa Yeam,
  • Byoung-Cheorl Kang,
  • Daniel R. Ripoll,
  • Jinhee Kim,
  • John F. Murphy,
  • Molly M. Jahn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI-04-12-0091-R
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 12
pp. 1562 – 1573

Abstract

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Potyvirus resistance in Capsicum spp. has been attributed to amino acid substitutions at the pvr1 locus that cause conformational shifts in eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4E. The viral genome-linked protein (VPg) sequence was isolated and compared from three Tobacco etch virus (TEV) strains, highly aphid-transmissible (HAT), Mex21, and N, which differentially infect Capsicum genotypes encoding Pvr1+, pvr1, and pvr12. Viral chimeras were synthesized using the TEV-HAT genome, replacing HAT VPg with Mex21 or N VPg. TEV HAT did not infect pepper plants homozygous for either the pvr1 or pvr12 allele. However, the novel chimeric TEV strains, TEV-HATMex21-VPg and TEV-HATN-VPg, infected pvr1 and pvr12 pepper plants, respectively, demonstrating that VPg is the virulence determinant in this pathosystem. Three-dimensional structural models predicted interaction between VPg and the susceptible eIF4E genotype in every case, while resistant genotypes were never predicted to interact. To determine whether there is a correlation between physical interaction of VPg with eIF4E and infectivity, the effects of amino acid variation within VPg were assessed. Interaction between pvr12 eIF4E and N VPg was detected in planta, implying that the six amino acid differences in N VPg relative to HAT VPg are responsible for restoring the physical interaction and infectivity.