TY - JOUR
T1 - Neophytadiene, a Plant Specialized Metabolite, Mediates the Virus-Vector-Plant Tripartite Interactions
AU - Shi, Xiao bin
AU - Yue, Hao
AU - Wei, Yan
AU - Preisser, Evan L.
AU - Wang, Pei
AU - Du, Jiao
AU - Xia, Ji xing
AU - Li, Kai long
AU - Yang, Xin
AU - Chen, Jian bin
AU - Zhang, Song bai
AU - Zhang, Zhan hong
AU - Zhou, Xu guo
AU - Zhang, De yong
AU - Liu, Yong
N1 - The authors thank Tao Zhou (China Agricultural University) for kindly providing the infectious cDNA clone of ToCV. This project was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (32030088), the Hunan Natural Science Fundation for Distinguished Young Scholars (No. 2023JJ10026), the Young Talent Program of Hunan Province (2022RC1149), the Agriculture Research System of China (No. CARS\u201023\u2010D\u201002), and the C.W. Kearns, C.L. Metcalf, and W.P. Flint Endowed Chair Professorship in Insect Toxicology to X.G.Z.
PY - 2025/4/3
Y1 - 2025/4/3
N2 - While interactions between viruses and their vectors, as well as between viruses and host plants, have been extensively studied, the genetic mechanisms underlying tripartite interactions remain largely unknown. In this study, phenotypic assays are integrated with molecular biology and functional genomic approaches to elucidate the tripartite interactions involving tomato chlorosis virus (ToCV), a major threat to tomato production worldwide, the whitefly, Bemisia tabaci, an insect vector, and host plants. ToCV infection induces the production of a chlorophyll degradation product that acts as a volatile attractant for whiteflies. Furthermore, the suppression of Lhca4, a gene encoding subunit of light-harvesting complex I in host plants, by the P9 protein of ToCV leads to chlorophyll degradation and neophytadiene biosynthesis. Overexpression of Lhca4 reduced chlorophyll production and ToCV infection. Furthermore, OBP2, an odorant-binding protein from B. tabaci, capable of binding to neophytadiene is identified. Suppression of BtOBP2 impaired vector's subsequent preference for ToCV-infected plants. The results not only reveal the genetic underpinnings, including ToCV P9, host plant Lhca4, and whitefly BtOBP2, governing the virus-vector-plant interactions, but also highlight neophytadiene, a specialized metabolite in host plants, as a mediator of intricate multitrophic interactions, suggesting new avenues for managing plant virus vectored by insects.
AB - While interactions between viruses and their vectors, as well as between viruses and host plants, have been extensively studied, the genetic mechanisms underlying tripartite interactions remain largely unknown. In this study, phenotypic assays are integrated with molecular biology and functional genomic approaches to elucidate the tripartite interactions involving tomato chlorosis virus (ToCV), a major threat to tomato production worldwide, the whitefly, Bemisia tabaci, an insect vector, and host plants. ToCV infection induces the production of a chlorophyll degradation product that acts as a volatile attractant for whiteflies. Furthermore, the suppression of Lhca4, a gene encoding subunit of light-harvesting complex I in host plants, by the P9 protein of ToCV leads to chlorophyll degradation and neophytadiene biosynthesis. Overexpression of Lhca4 reduced chlorophyll production and ToCV infection. Furthermore, OBP2, an odorant-binding protein from B. tabaci, capable of binding to neophytadiene is identified. Suppression of BtOBP2 impaired vector's subsequent preference for ToCV-infected plants. The results not only reveal the genetic underpinnings, including ToCV P9, host plant Lhca4, and whitefly BtOBP2, governing the virus-vector-plant interactions, but also highlight neophytadiene, a specialized metabolite in host plants, as a mediator of intricate multitrophic interactions, suggesting new avenues for managing plant virus vectored by insects.
KW - Bemisia tabaci
KW - chlorophyll degradation
KW - neophytadiene
KW - odorant-binding protein
KW - tomato chlorosis virus
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U2 - 10.1002/advs.202416891
DO - 10.1002/advs.202416891
M3 - Article
C2 - 40178133
AN - SCOPUS:105002149927
SN - 2198-3844
JO - Advanced Science
JF - Advanced Science
ER -