Cross talks between plant and insects can be perceived by infecting viruses : putative ecological consequences - INRAE - Institut national de recherche pour l’agriculture, l’alimentation et l’environnement Access content directly
Conference Papers Year : 2012

Cross talks between plant and insects can be perceived by infecting viruses : putative ecological consequences

Abstract

Most plant viruses are transmitted by vectors, particularly by hemipteran insects. The interactions between plants, viruses and insect vectors are obviously highly sophisticated, but they remain only very fragmentarily understood. Indeed, while countless reports have focused on two way interactions between the couples plant-insect, plant-virus, and virus-insect, the studies actually addressing three ways interactions in this type of biological system remains extremely scarce. The impact of plant viralinfection on the insect behavior have sometimes been addressed, reporting for example increased insect attraction due to changes in leaf colors, in volatile emission, or in sap composition. Surprisingly enough, despite the fact that common defense pathways are induced in plants by viral infection and by insect attack, a possible impact of the insect colonization of the plants onto the viral infection cycle has never been addressed. We have recently demonstrated that Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) is able to highjack the plant perception of aphid feeding, and to immediately react by producing transmission specific morphs within infected plant cells. Interestingly, we demonstrated that non-aphid stresses such as wounding, or exposure to CO2-saturated atmosphere is provoking the same CaMV reaction, correlatively enhancing the efficiency of vector-transmission. This discovery is opening a wide new horizon for research in this field, evaluating the possible range of viral reactions to the feeding of insect vectors, and the range of unrelated biotic or non-biotic stresses that can “falsely” provoke these viral reactions and increase transmission

Domains

Vegetal Biology
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Dates and versions

hal-02744944 , version 1 (03-06-2020)

Identifiers

  • HAL Id : hal-02744944 , version 1
  • PRODINRA : 262574

Cite

Alexandre Martiniere, Aurélie Bak, Stéphane Blanc, Martin Drucker. Cross talks between plant and insects can be perceived by infecting viruses : putative ecological consequences. 16. Congreso de la Sociedad Española de Fitopatología (SEF). Congrès Annuel de la Société Espagnole de Phytopathologie, Sep 2012, Malaga, Spain. 416 p. ⟨hal-02744944⟩
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