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Changing Patterns of Localization of the Tobacco Mosaic Virus Movement Protein and Replicase to the Endoplasmic Reticulum and Microtubules during InfectionManfred Heinlein1,a, Hal S. Padgetta, J. Scott Gensb, Barbara G. Pickardb, Steven J. Casper2,a, Bernard L. Epelc, and Roger N. Beachyaa Division of Plant Biology, BCC 206, Department of Cell Biology, Scripps Research Institute, 10550 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, California 92037 b Biology Department, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 63130-4899 c Department of Plant Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel Correspondence to: Roger N. Beachy, beachy{at}scripps.edu (E-mail), 619-784-2994 (fax).
Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) derivatives that encode movement protein (MP) as a fusion to the green fluorescent protein (MP:GFP) were used in combination with antibody staining to identify host cell components to which MP and replicase accumulate in cells of infected Nicotiana benthamiana leaves and in infected BY-2 protoplasts. MP:GFP and replicase colocalized to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER; especially the cortical ER) and were present in large, irregularly shaped, ER-derived structures that may represent "viral factories." The ER-derived structures required an intact cytoskeleton, and microtubules appeared to redistribute MP:GFP from these sites during late stages of infection. In leaves, MP:GFP accumulated in plasmodesmata, whereas in protoplasts, the MP:GFP was targeted to distinct, punctate sites near the plasma membrane. Treating protoplasts with cytochalasin D and brefeldin A at the time of inoculation prevented the accumulation of MP:GFP at these sites. It is proposed that the punctate sites anchor the cortical ER to plasma membrane and are related to sites at which plasmodesmata form in walled cells. Hairlike structures containing MP:GFP appeared on the surface of some of the infected protoplasts and are reminiscent of similar structures induced by other plant viruses. We present a model that postulates the role of the ER and cytoskeleton in targeting the MP and viral ribonucleoprotein from sites of virus synthesis to the plasmodesmata through which infection is spread.
Most plant viruses encode one or more proteins that are required to achieve local and systemic invasion of the host. These so-called movement proteins (MPs) enable viruses to exploit plasmodesmata, the gated, plasma membranelined channels that provide symplastic continuity between adjacent cells and through which plant cells communicate (
Pioneering studies of MP functions were performed with the MP of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (
Although it is evident that the MP and vRNP must enlist cytoplasmic structures to aid transfer from their site of synthesis to the plasmodesmata, little is known about the nature of these components and about the targeting mechanism per se. F-actin and microtubules were proposed as targeting systems for MP (
Analysis of fluorescent infection sites found on leaves of Nicotiana benthamiana as well as analysis of N. tabacum infected with another tobamovirus, Ob, revealed that association of the MP with cellular elements is more complex than simple association of MP with microtubules and actin filaments. In infected leaf cells, MP:GFP fluorescence was detected not only in regions within the cell wall presumed to be plasmodesmata and as filamentous structures presumed to be microtubules but also in irregularly shaped bodies of unknown origin (
The purposes of the present study were (1) to use the type member of the tobamovirus group, TMV, to compare the distribution of MP:GFP produced during infection of tobacco BY-2 protoplasts with the patterns of subcellular accumulation in TMV-infected N. benthamiana leaves and (2) to use antibodies to label infected protoplasts to establish the spatial relationship between MP:GFP, TMV replicase, microtubules, and other cellular components. This study revealed similar distributions of MP:GFP between plant cells and protoplasts during the course of infection. MP:GFP and viral replicase colocalized to the cortical endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and to irregularly shaped structures that are apparently derived from ER and that may represent sites of virus replication. The results of studies with the inhibitors cytochalasin D (Cyt D), oryzalin, and brefeldin A (BFA) support the role of microtubules, actin filaments, and the ER in the targeting and accumulation of MP:GFP in protoplasts. Considering that actin is associated with the ER and that the ER and microtubules can be close together (
Accumulation of MP:GFP in Protoplasts and Leaves Infected by TMVMP:GFP
When fixed protoplasts harvested at 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, and 30 HPI were examined by fluorescence microscopy, significant differences in the accumulation and subcellular localization of the MP:GFP were observed. The sequence describing the accumulation of MP:GFP in various structures shown in Figure 2 was established by identifying the time at which particular fluorescent patterns first appeared as well as by determining the frequency of each pattern at successive times after infection (Figure 3A and Figure 3B). Together, the observations suggest the following sequence of events. At 7 to 8 HPI, MP:GFP is seen in peripheral punctate structures that are observed through 30 HPI (Figure 2A and Figure 2F). Between 8 and 12 HPI, MP:GFP accumulates in small irregularly shaped structures (Figure 2B), and between 12 and 20 HPI, these grow in size, or coalesce, to form larger and fewer structures (Figure 2C). The next stage of infection (16 to 24 HPI) is characterized by the association of MP:GFP with filaments (previously identified as association of MP:GFP with microtubules;
The virus construct used in these studies did not contain the coat protein (CP) gene. Based on the work of
It is possible to significantly increase gene expression from the subgenomic virus promoter that leads to expression of MP by adding actinomycin D (Act D) to the medium (
Accumulation Pattern of MP:GFP in Infection Sites on Leaves When N. benthamiana was infected with TMVMP:GFPCP, the accumulation of MP:GFP in infection sites was, as predicted, less than that produced by TMVMP:GFP (J. Szecsi, X.S. Ding, C.O. Lim, M. Bendahmane, M.J. Cho, R.S. Nelson, and R.N. Beachy, submitted manuscript). As in protoplasts, the number of cells containing the irregularly shaped bodies and filaments containing MP:GFP was low, presumably because the amount of MP:GFP produced by virus that produces CP is significantly less than that from virus that does not produce CP. Nevertheless, in infection sites produced by TMVMP:GFPCP, fluorescence was always observed in plasmodesmata.
Analysis of Subcellular Accumulation of MP:GFP
In some cells, the punctae appear to be arranged in rows (Figure 4B, left) and sometimes occur in the vicinity of microtubules (Figure 4B, right). To locate more accurately the punctate structures, we used wide-field computational optical-sectioning microscopy. In this study, 0.45-µm optical sections of infected protoplasts were obtained with a pixel size of 0.22 x 0.22 µm, and fluorescence was restored toward the sites of emission, as described previously (
The fluorescence of the MP:GFP associated with the cortical network sometimes was sufficiently strong for detection by conventional fluorescence microscopy (Figure 4E, left). The pattern of this network is similar to the reticulate pattern of the cortical ER that was visualized in protoplasts after staining with DiOC6, which is known to stain the ER (Figure 4E, right). To confirm that the MP:GFP is associated with the ER, we stained infected protoplasts with antibodies against immunoglobulin binding protein (BiP), a luminal ER constituent (
To characterize further the association of MP:GFP with the punctate structures, infected protoplasts were treated with compounds known to affect ER and filamentous actin and tubulin. BFA is a fungal metabolite that affects the endomembrane system and secretory pathways (
The microtubule-disrupting herbicide oryzalin (10 µm) ( Infected protoplasts that were cultured in the presence of 25 µg/mL of Cyt D were characterized by reduced fluorescence of the punctae (Figure 4G, right), indicating that when filamentous actin is disrupted, the accumulation, aggregation, anchoring, or persistence of MP:GFP at these sites may be inhibited.
MP:GFP in Irregularly Shaped Structures
The spatial distribution of the irregular, MP:GFPlabeled structures was correlated with location of microtubules by staining fixed cells with anti-tubulin antibody and rhodamine-labeled secondary antibody (Figure 5D). At 16 HPI, the MP:GFPcontaining structures were closely associated with microtubules, and later in infection (e.g., 20 HPI), when the microtubules were apparently covered with MP:GFP, the ER-associated fluorescent structures often appeared to be dragged apart along the filaments (Figure 5D). This is consistent with the hypothesis that the MP:GFP, either free or in association with material, is redistributed from labeled ER onto microtubules. Treatment of protoplasts with oryzalin caused the irregular, MP:GFPcontaining structures to lose shape and to coalesce (data not shown), suggesting that microtubules may be involved in the spatial separation of these structures. Treatment of infected cells with Cyt D altered the shape of the MP:GFPcontaining structures (data not shown), suggesting that actin confers structural support to these structures. When BFA was added to protoplasts at the time of infection, the accumulation of MP:GFP in the irregular fluorescent structures was inhibited. However, when BFA was added at 8 to 20 HPI and protoplasts were observed at 22 or 30 HPI, there was no apparent effect on MP:GFP accumulation. These data suggest that BFA inhibits the establishment of, or the association of MP:GFP with, these structures but has no influence once the structures are formed.
To determine whether any of the MP:GFPcontaining structures represent sites of virus replication, protoplasts were harvested at various times after infection with TMVMP:GFP or TMVMP:GFPCP and were stained with antibody against TMV replicase (
MP:GFPLabeled Filaments
Protrusions from the Plasma Membrane of Infected Protoplasts Contain MP:GFP
Transient Expression of the MP
Derivatives of TMV that express the MP as a fusion with the GFP were used to visualize the time course of MP accumulation and association with host components in infected N. benthamiana cells and BY-2 protoplasts. The subcellular locations of MP:GFP that we visualized by using fluorescence microscopy suggest the following temporal sequence of MP:GFP accumulation and distribution in infected protoplasts and leaves: MP:GFP first appeared (6 to 8 HPI) in peripheral punctate structures in protoplasts and in plasmodesmata in plants, where it persisted throughout infection. At ~12 HPI, the MP:GFP began to accumulate in irregularly shaped structures that derived from cortical ER. These fluorescent structures increased in size between 12 and 20 HPI and diminished thereafter as MP synthesis declined and the MP:GFP was redistributed onto microtubules. The association of MP:GFP with the irregular structures then diminished (starting at 16 HPI) and was associated with fluorescent microtubules together with peripheral punctate sites in protoplasts and with plasmodesmata in leaf cells. Finally, by ~30 HPI, the fluorescence on microtubules disappeared, and fluorescence was again confined to the punctate sites and protrusions appearing on the plasma membrane surface. At late stages of infection, we also observed a general haze of fluorescence throughout the cytosol that may represent free or partially degraded MP:GFP or modified soluble MP:GFP.
The amount of MP:GFP produced was less in cells infected by the virus construct that contained the CP open reading frame (TMVMP:GFPCP) than in cells infected with virus without the CP sequence, and it was increased by adding Act D to the culture medium. Because the fluorescent irregular structures occur during virus infection and contain replicase, we propose that they represent "viral factories," that is, sites at which virus replication and synthesis and accumulation of MP:GFP are concurrent. The finding that viral protein synthesis and virus replication occur in the same complex (
In cell fractionation studies, the TMV MP behaved as a highly hydrophobic protein and copurified with membranes that contain enzyme markers common to the ER (
MP:GFP accumulates in punctate structures in protoplasts when expressed transiently from a constitutive promoter, and MP accumulates in plasmodesmata in transgenic plants (
The peripheral punctae are often regularly spaced and in some cells appear coincident with microtubules. It was previously postulated that microtubules attach at punctate cytoskeleton-to-membrane-to-wall adhesion sites in plant cells (
Although Cyt D had no effect on the structure and distribution of the fluorescent punctate structures, it reduced their fluorescence, suggesting that filamentous actin plays a role in targeting or anchoring of the MP:GFP at these sites. In onion cells, actin is known to localize to putative cell wall adhesion sites and to be associated with the endomembrane sheath that clads the ER (
Because accumulation of the MP:GFP in the punctate sites is not affected by treatment with oryzalin, microtubules may not have an immediate role in targeting the MP to these sites or, by inference, to the plasmodesmata. However, the proximity sometimes observed between the ER and microtubules (
The appearance of MP:GFP plasma membrane protrusions is reminiscent of the projections on the surface of plant protoplasts and insect cells that express the movement proteins of tubule-forming viruses such as cowpea mosaic virus ( Taken together, our observations that the MP and the replicase are localized on the ER suggest a major role for the ER in viral pathogenesis. We propose that the MP and replicase are colocalized in complexes on the cytoplasmic face of the ER and give rise to viral factories that, in mature infections, form X-bodies. The actin cytoskeleton that clads the ER and confers structural stability as well as motor force may play a role in delivering and attaching the MP to the putative cell wall adhesion sites and the plasmodesmata. Microtubules may provide the major skeletal element that distributes viral replication complexes throughout the cell, for long-distance transport of the MP and the viral genome, and possibly for targeting the MP for degradation.
Plasmids
Inoculation of Plants and Protoplasts and Treatments with Inhibitors
Fluorometric Analysis
Immunofluorescent Labeling and Microscopy
For DiOC6 staining, protoplasts were incubated in 0.4 M mannitol containing 0.25% glutaraldehyde (
Wide-Field Computational Optical-Sectioning Microscopy
1 Current address: Friedrich Miescher-Institut, P.O. Box 2543, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland.
We thank Linda Wagner at Edge Scientific Instrument Co. (Santa Monica, CA) for providing the Edge True-View 3DTM Head and Dr. Rebecca S. Boston (North Carolina State University, Raleigh) for providing antimaize b-70 (BiP) antibody. This research was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) through Grants No. MCB 9317368 and No. MCB 9631124 to R.N.B.; by a grant from the United States of AmericaIsrael Bi-National Agricultural Research and Development Fund (BARD) to R.N.B. and B.L.E.; by a National Aeronautics and Space Administration/NSF Joint Program in Plant Biology through Grant No. IBN941601 to B.G.P.; and by the Human Frontier Science Program Organization through a long-term fellowship to M.H. J.S.G. was supported by a Monsanto Predoctoral Fellowship in Plant Biology. We thank Dr. James G. McNally for collegial support of optical sectioning microscopy activities. Received February 23, 1998; accepted April 28, 1998.
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