Plant viruses are the causal agents of many plant diseases and the subsequent economic losses, estimated to be US$60 billion worldwide each year. The melon necrotic spot virus (MNSV) is a small, single-stranded, positive-sense RNA virus that belongs to the genus Gammacarmovirus and encodes five proteins. The coat protein (CP) is composed of three distinct domains. The discovery of a dual transit peptide in the amino-terminal part of the CP was the starting point of this thesis. Early in MNSV infection, the new synthesized CP is imported into chloroplasts and mitochondria, while the cytoplasmic pool increases as the infection progresses. Inhibiting this dual transport leads to an increase in the RNA silencing suppressor activity of the CP. However, far from resulting in an enhanced infection development, systemic spread was impaired. Therefore, the accumulation of cytoplasmic CP may cause an increase in viral replication and overexpression of p29, an auxiliary replicase that causes morphological alterations, ROS, and necrosis that may restrict viral movement. Thus, a new role for CP targeting would be to avoid excessive viral replication by modulating the suppressor activity to manage the balance between plant defense and viral counter-defense, leading to a compatible interaction. Unfortunately, Arabidopsis thaliana is not a host for MNSV. Thus, to better understand the molecular mechanism behind the CP dual targeting, the receptors and pores of the Nicotiana benthamiana mitochondrial and chloroplast outer membrane translocons were genome identified, and some functional characterization was carried out. We assigned the following names NbToc75-III, NbToc34, NbToc90, NbToc120, NbToc159A, NbToc159B, NbTic22-III for chloroplast translocon components, and NbTom40, NbTom20-1, NbTom20-2, NbOm64 for mitochondrion translocon components. The functional characterization was mainly carried out by virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) and RT-qPCR, revealing a functional redundancy higher than that reported for Arabidopsis homologs. Additionally, VIGS was also used to evaluate the relevance of each translocon component in MNSV infection, and together with CP-receptor interaction studies performed by BiFC and Y2H, allowed us to identify NbToc159A for chloroplasts and NbOm64 for mitochondria as the main receptors involved in the CP organelle import. Moreover, silencing of NbToc34, NbToc75, or NbTom40 resulted in a generalized resistance not only to MNSV but also to turnip crinkle virus (TCV), and carnation mottle virus (CarMV), supporting the current idea that involves the chloroplast and mitochondrion physiological state in early defense response signaling.
Finally, a search for host factors interacting with the CP was performed by the innovative TurboID proximity labeling tool, which allows the detection of both direct/indirect and transient/stable interactions. Thus, a large number of candidate proteins were obtained that interacted either with the MNSV CP or with ¿NtCP, a cytoplasm-localized mutant. Three of them, NbSIK1, NbSMU2, and NbMAP3K, showed a consistent and repetitive detrimental effect on MNSV RNA accumulation. After the validation of the interactions using another method and the analysis of the subcellular localization of the MNSV CP under each interactor silencing, two main hypotheses were proposed. Firstly, since the main function of NbSMU2 is related to messenger RNA regulation by splicing, this protein could be sequestered by the CP, causing the expression of proviral genes. On the other hand, NbSIK1 and NbMAP3K act as positive and negative regulators of the PTI response to infection, respectively. Moreover, both proteins interact with each other and are part of the MAP kinase cascade, so in our second hypothesis, CP would interact with this complex, promoting a negative regulation of PTI that would facilitate viral infection.
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