Honjo Mie N, Emura Naoko, Kamitani Mari, Kudoh Hiroshi
Center for Ecological Research, Kyoto University, Hirano 2-509-3, Otsu 520-2113, Japan.
Faculty of Agriculture, Kagoshima University, Korimoto 1-21-24, Kagoshima 890-0065, Japan.
Plant Cell Physiol. 2025 May 17;66(4):596-615. doi: 10.1093/pcp/pcaf010.
Since plant viruses cause lifelong infections, virus-plant interactions are exposed to large temperature fluctuations in evergreen perennials. In such circumstances, virus-plant interactions are expected to change significantly between the warm and cold seasons. However, few studies have investigated the effects of cold temperatures on virus-plant interactions. Here, we show that in a persistent infection system of the turnip mosaic virus (TuMV)-Arabidopsis halleri, cold temperatures lead to slow viral replication/spreading within the host, attenuated host symptoms, and cold-specific transcriptomic responses. Many differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were detected between virus-inoculated and mock-inoculated plants under warm and cold conditions; however, the sets of DEGs and response timings were temperature-dependent. At cold temperatures, the expression of photosynthesis-related genes decreased in the early stages of infection. However, it recovered to the same level as that in uninfected plants in the later stages. In contrast, the transcriptomic changes under warm conditions suggest that viral infections cause auxin signaling disruption. These responses coincided with the inhibition of host growth. We identified 6 cold- and 38 warm-specific DEGs, which changed their expression in response to TuMV infection under more than half of the conditions for either cold or warm temperatures. Further validation of the putative relationships between transcriptomic and phenotypic responses of the host is required. Our findings on temperature-dependent host responses at both symptomatic and transcriptomic levels help us understand how warm and cold temperatures affect virus-plant interactions in seasonal environments.
由于植物病毒会引发终身感染,在常绿多年生植物中,病毒与植物的相互作用会受到大幅度的温度波动影响。在这种情况下,病毒与植物的相互作用在温暖季节和寒冷季节之间预计会发生显著变化。然而,很少有研究调查低温对病毒与植物相互作用的影响。在此,我们表明,在芜菁花叶病毒(TuMV)-拟南芥的持续感染系统中,低温会导致病毒在宿主内的复制/传播缓慢、宿主症状减轻以及产生特定于低温的转录组反应。在温暖和寒冷条件下,在接种病毒和模拟接种的植物之间检测到许多差异表达基因(DEG);然而,DEG的集合和反应时间是依赖于温度的。在低温下,光合作用相关基因的表达在感染早期下降。然而,在后期它恢复到与未感染植物相同的水平。相比之下,温暖条件下的转录组变化表明病毒感染会导致生长素信号传导中断。这些反应与宿主生长的抑制相吻合。我们鉴定出6个低温特异性和38个温暖特异性DEG,它们在超过一半的低温或温暖条件下响应TuMV感染而改变表达。需要进一步验证宿主转录组和表型反应之间的假定关系。我们在症状和转录组水平上关于温度依赖性宿主反应的发现有助于我们理解温暖和寒冷温度如何在季节性环境中影响病毒与植物的相互作用。