The tomato yellow leaf curl virus C4 protein alters the expression of plant developmental genes correlating to leaf upward cupping phenotype in tomato

2021 
Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV), a monopartite begomovirus in the family Geminiviridae , is efficiently transmitted by the whitefly, Bemisia tabaci , and causes serious economic losses to tomato crops around the world. TYLCV-infected tomato plants develop distinctive symptoms of yellowing and leaf upper cupping. In recent years, excellent progress has been made in the characterization of TYLCV C4 protein function as a pathogenetic determinant in experimental plants, including Nicotiana benthamiana and Arabidopsis thaliana . However, molecular mechanism leading to disease symptom development in natural host plant tomato has yet to be characterized. The aim of the current study was to generate transgenic tomato plants expressing the TYLCV C4 gene and evaluate differential gene expression through comparative transcriptome analysis between the transgenic C4 plants and the transgenic green fluorescent protein ( Gfp) gene control plants. Transgenic tomato plants expressing the TYLCV C4 developed phenotypes, including leaf upward cupping and yellowing that are similar the disease symptom expressed on tomato plants infected with TYLCV. In a total of 241 differentially expressed genes identified in the transcriptome analysis, a series of plant development-related genes, including transcription factors, glutaredoxins, protein kinases, R-genes and microRNA target genes, were significantly altered. These results provide further evidence to support the important function of the C4 protein in begomovirus pathogenicity. These transgenic tomato plants could serve as basic genetic materials for further characterization of plant receptors that are interacting with the TYLCV C4.
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