Functionality of potato virus Y coat protein in cell-to-cell movement dynamics is defined by its N terminal region

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This study investigated how the N-terminal region of the Potato virus Y (PVY) coat protein affects viral spread in Nicotiana clevelandii by generating PVY N605 N-terminal deletion mutants and specific point mutations. The authors found that deleting 40 or more amino acids restricted PVY multiplication to primary infected cells, while a 26-residue deletion markedly impaired cell-to-cell movement and blocked systemic spread; smaller deletions allowed delayed systemic spread. Point mutations within the N-terminal region (S21G and G20P) prevented or delayed PVY movement, respectively. This paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.

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Abstract

Potato virus Y (PVY) is one of the top ten economically most important plant viruses and responsible for major yield losses. We previously suggested the involvement of the N terminal region of potato virus Y coat protein (CP) in PVY spread. By constructing different N terminal deletion mutants of PVY N605 strain, we here show that deletions of 40 or more amino acid residues from the N terminal region of the CP resulted in the PVY multiplication limited to primary infected cells in Nicotiana clevelandii plants. Deletion of 26 residues profoundly impaired PVY cell-to-cell movement and prevented systemic PVY spread, while deletions of 19-23 residues allowed delayed systemic PVY spread. Introduced point mutations in the identified region prevent (S21G) or delay (G20P) PVY movement. In summary, this work shows the significance of the CP N-terminus for movement of the PVY.
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Abstract Potato virus Y (PVY) is one of the top ten economically most important plant viruses and responsible for major yield losses. We previously suggested the involvement of the N terminal region of potato virus Y coat protein (CP) in PVY spread. By constructing different N terminal deletion mutants of PVY N605 strain, we here show that deletions of 40 or more amino acid residues from the N terminal region of the CP resulted in the PVY multiplication limited to primary infected cells in Nicotiana clevelandii plants. Deletion of 26 residues profoundly impaired PVY cell-to-cell movement and prevented systemic PVY spread, while deletions of 19-23 residues allowed delayed systemic PVY spread. Introduced point mutations in the identified region prevent (S21G) or delay (G20P) PVY movement. In summary, this work shows the significance of the CP N-terminus for movement of the PVY. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest. Footnotes ↵† shared last authorship Improved version of the paper with some structural analysis data and in depth discussion.

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