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PROTEIN DISULFIDE ISOMERASE LIKE 5-1 is a susceptibility factor to plant viruses. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Protein disulfide isomerases (PDIs) help proteins fold correctly and avoid aggregation, with some PDIs affecting viral replication in humans but less understood in plants.
  • Researchers identified variants of PROTEIN DISULFIDE ISOMERASE LIKE 5-1 (HvPDIL5-1) that confer resistance to different strains of Bymoviruses in barley through various genetic tests.
  • The study highlights that the origin of these resistance alleles is in domesticated barley from Eastern Asia, with the finding that areas with more viral diversity correlate with higher genetic diversity in HvPDIL5-1, suggesting that similar PDIs could influence virus susceptibility in other species.

Article Abstract

Protein disulfide isomerases (PDIs) catalyze the correct folding of proteins and prevent the aggregation of unfolded or partially folded precursors. Whereas suppression of members of the PDI gene family can delay replication of several human and animal viruses (e.g., HIV), their role in interactions with plant viruses is largely unknown. Here, using a positional cloning strategy we identified variants of PROTEIN DISULFIDE ISOMERASE LIKE 5-1 (HvPDIL5-1) as the cause of naturally occurring resistance to multiple strains of Bymoviruses. The role of wild-type HvPDIL5-1 in conferring susceptibility was confirmed by targeting induced local lesions in genomes for induced mutant alleles, transgene-induced complementation, and allelism tests using different natural resistance alleles. The geographical distribution of natural genetic variants of HvPDIL5-1 revealed the origin of resistance conferring alleles in domesticated barley in Eastern Asia. Higher sequence diversity was correlated with areas with increased pathogen diversity suggesting adaptive selection for bymovirus resistance. HvPDIL5-1 homologs are highly conserved across species of the plant and animal kingdoms implying that orthologs of HvPDIL5-1 or other closely related members of the PDI gene family may be potential susceptibility factors to viruses in other eukaryotic species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3926060PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1320362111DOI Listing

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