The seed-borne Southern bean mosaic virus hinders the early events of nodulation and growth in Rhizobium-inoculated Phaseolus vulgaris L.

Funct Plant Biol

Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, Centro de Microbiología y Biología Celular, apartado postal 21827 Caracas 1020-A, Venezuela.

Published: February 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • A noninvasive method was developed to effectively infect germinating black bean seeds with Southern bean mosaic virus (SBMV), showing that preinfection significantly reduces root nodulation when Rhizobium is introduced later.
  • Active virus replication in the radicle's elongating zone leads to severe anatomical changes, including the abnormal accumulation of reactive oxygen species and the collapse of 94% of root hairs in infected plants.
  • Adult plants infected with SBMV exhibited worsened virus symptoms and reduced growth due to structural changes in nodules and disruptions in nitrogen fixation processes, with the addition of specific compounds failing to reverse the negative impacts on nodulation.

Article Abstract

To simulate seed-borne virus transmission, a noninvasive protocol was designed to infect the radicle of germinating seeds, with 100% effectiveness. Preinfection of 24-h-old black bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) radicles by Southern bean mosaic virus (SBMV) followed by Rhizobium inoculation 48h later caused a drastic reduction in root nodulation. Results were attributed to active virus replication within the elongating zone of the radicle at least 32h before Rhizobium inoculation, which elicited severe anatomical malformations; an abnormal accumulation of apoplastic reactive oxygen species in the rhizodermis, cortex, inner cortical and endodermic root cells; the formation of atypical root hair tips and the collapse of 94% of the root hairs in the SBMV-preinfected radicles. Adult SBMV-preinfected plants showed exacerbated virus symptoms and 80% growth reduction ascribed to major virus-induced ultrastructural alterations in the nodules. The accumulation of ureides, α-amino acids and total reducing sugars in the leaves and nodules of SBMV-preinfected plants are indicators of the hindering effects of SBMV infection on N2 fixation and ureide catabolism, causing N starvation. The exogenous addition of 1 or 4μM naringenin, genistein or daidzein did not counteract the deleterious effects of SBMV preinfection on nodulation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/FP16180DOI Listing

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