Paudel Dinesh Babu, Sanfaçon Hélène
Department of Botany, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Summerland Research and Development Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Summerland, BC, Canada.
Front Plant Sci. 2018 Nov 2;9:1575. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2018.01575. eCollection 2018.
Tolerance is defined as an interaction in which viruses accumulate to some degree without causing significant loss of vigor or fitness to their hosts. Tolerance can be described as a stable equilibrium between the virus and its host, an interaction in which each partner not only accommodate trade-offs for survival but also receive some benefits (e.g., protection of the plant against super-infection by virulent viruses; virus invasion of meristem tissues allowing vertical transmission). This equilibrium, which would be associated with little selective pressure for the emergence of severe viral strains, is common in wild ecosystems and has important implications for the management of viral diseases in the field. Plant viruses are obligatory intracellular parasites that divert the host cellular machinery to complete their infection cycle. Highjacking/modification of plant factors can affect plant vigor and fitness. In addition, the toxic effects of viral proteins and the deployment of plant defense responses contribute to the induction of symptoms ranging in severity from tissue discoloration to malformation or tissue necrosis. The impact of viral infection is also influenced by the virulence of the specific virus strain (or strains for mixed infections), the host genotype and environmental conditions. Although plant resistance mechanisms that restrict virus accumulation or movement have received much attention, molecular mechanisms associated with tolerance are less well-understood. We review the experimental evidence that supports the concept that tolerance can be achieved by reaching the proper balance between plant defense responses and virus counter-defenses. We also discuss plant translation repression mechanisms, plant protein degradation or modification pathways and viral self-attenuation strategies that regulate the accumulation or activity of viral proteins to mitigate their impact on the host. Finally, we discuss current progress and future opportunities toward the application of various tolerance mechanisms in the field.
耐受性被定义为一种相互作用,即病毒在一定程度上积累,但不会对其宿主的活力或适应性造成显著损失。耐受性可以被描述为病毒与其宿主之间的一种稳定平衡,在这种相互作用中,每个伙伴不仅为了生存而进行权衡,还能获得一些益处(例如,保护植物免受强毒病毒的二次感染;病毒侵入分生组织实现垂直传播)。这种平衡与严重病毒株出现的选择压力较小相关,在野生生态系统中很常见,并且对田间病毒性疾病的管理具有重要意义。植物病毒是专性细胞内寄生虫,它们利用宿主细胞机制来完成其感染周期。劫持/修饰植物因子会影响植物的活力和适应性。此外,病毒蛋白的毒性作用以及植物防御反应的展开会导致从组织变色到畸形或组织坏死等严重程度不等的症状出现。病毒感染的影响还受到特定病毒株(或混合感染的多种病毒株)的毒力、宿主基因型和环境条件的影响。尽管限制病毒积累或移动的植物抗性机制受到了广泛关注,但与耐受性相关的分子机制却了解较少。我们回顾了支持以下概念的实验证据:通过在植物防御反应和病毒反防御之间达到适当平衡可以实现耐受性。我们还讨论了植物翻译抑制机制、植物蛋白降解或修饰途径以及调节病毒蛋白积累或活性以减轻其对宿主影响的病毒自我衰减策略。最后,我们讨论了在田间应用各种耐受性机制的当前进展和未来机遇。