Viral Hacks of the Plant Vasculature: The Role of Phloem Alterations in Systemic Virus Infection

Annu Rev Virol. 2020 Sep 29;7(1):351-370. doi: 10.1146/annurev-virology-010320-072410. Epub 2020 May 26.

Abstract

For plant viruses, the ability to load into the vascular phloem and spread systemically within a host is an essential step in establishing a successful infection. However, access to the vascular phloem is highly regulated, representing a significant obstacle to virus loading, movement, and subsequent unloading into distal uninfected tissues. Recent studies indicate that during virus infection, phloem tissues are a source of significant transcriptional and translational alterations, with the number of virus-induced differentially expressed genes being four- to sixfold greater in phloem tissues than in surrounding nonphloem tissues. In addition, viruses target phloem-specific components as a means to promote their own systemic movement and disrupt host defense processes. Combined, these studies provide evidence that the vascular phloem plays a significant role in the mediation and control of host responses during infection and as such is a site of considerable modulation by the infecting virus. This review outlines the phloem responses and directed reprograming mechanisms that viruses employ to promote their movement through the vasculature.

Keywords: phloem signaling; plasmodesmata; tobacco mosaic virus; translatome; vascular loading.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Host Microbial Interactions*
  • Phloem / metabolism
  • Phloem / virology*
  • Plant Diseases / virology*
  • Plant Viruses / pathogenicity*
  • Plants / virology*
  • Signal Transduction