Flotillin 2 Facilitates the Infection of a Plant Virus in the Gut of Insect Vector.

J Virol

State Key Laboratory of Integrated Management of Pest Insects and Rodents, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciencesgrid.9227.e, Beijing, China.

Published: April 2022

Most plant viruses require insect vectors for transmission. One of the key steps for the transmission of persistent-circulative plant viruses is overcoming the gut barrier to enter epithelial cells. To date, little has been known about viral cofactors in gut epithelial cells of insect vectors. Here, we identified flotillin 2 as a plasma membrane protein that facilitates the infection of rice stripe virus (RSV) in its vector, the small brown planthopper. Flotillin 2 displayed a prominent plasma membrane location in midgut epithelial cells. The nucleocapsid protein of RSV and flotillin 2 colocalized on gut microvilli, and a nanomolar affinity existed between the two proteins. Knockout of impeded the entry of virions into epithelial cells, resulting in a 57% reduction of RSV levels in planthoppers. The knockout of decreased disease incidence in rice plants fed by viruliferous planthoppers from 40% to 11.7%. Furthermore, flotillin 2 mediated the infection of southern rice black-streaked dwarf virus in its vector, the white-backed planthopper. This work implies the potential of flotillin 2 as a target for controlling the transmission of rice stripe disease. Plant viral diseases are a major threat to world agriculture. The transmission of 80% of plant viruses requires vector insects, and 54% of vector-borne plant viruses are persistent-circulative viruses, which must overcome the barriers of gut cells with the help of proteins on the cell surface. Here, we identified flotillin 2 as a membrane protein that mediates the cell entry of rice stripe virus in its vector insect, small brown planthopper. Flotillin 2 displays a prominent cellular membrane location in midgut cells and can specifically bind to virions. The loss of flotillin 2 impedes the entry of virions into the midgut cells of vector insects and substantially suppresses viral transmission to rice. Therefore, may be a promising target gene for manipulation in vector insects to control the transmission of rice stripe disease and perhaps that of other rice virus diseases in the future.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9006895PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jvi.02140-21DOI Listing

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