Publication | Open Access
The movement proteins of cowpea mosaic virus and cauliflower mosaic virus induce tubular structures in plant and insect cells
97
Citations
26
References
1996
Year
Viral ReplicationMolecular BiologyPlant PathologyCytoskeletonPlant VirologyVirus StructureCowpea Mosaic VirusPlant-virus InteractionInsect CellsVirus GenePlant VirusVirologyMovement ProteinsCell BiologyBiologyNatural SciencesPathogenesisCauliflower Mosaic VirusMedicine
The movement proteins (MP) of cowpea mosaic virus and cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) are associated with tubular structures in vivo which participate in the transmission of virus particles from cell to cell. Both proteins have been expressed in plant protoplasts and insect cells. In all cases, immunofluorescent histochemistry showed that the MPs accumulate intracellularly as tubular extensions projecting from the cell surface. Additionally, electron microscopy revealed intracellular MP aggregates in CaMV MP-expressing cells. The data presented establish common features for the tubule-forming MPs: no other virus gene products are required for tubule formation and unique plant components (e.g. plasmodesmata) are not essential for tubule synthesis.
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