Publication | Open Access
Cell-to-Cell and Long-Distance Transport of Viruses in Plants.
600
Citations
116
References
1996
Year
BiologyVirus StructureG. SamuelMolecular VirologyPlant VirusPlant-virus InteractionDistinct ModesVirologyPlant PathologyMicrobiologyLong-distance TransportPlant VirologyVirus TransmissionMedicineCell BiologySlow Cell
The idea that viruses move through plants in two distinct modes was accurately concluded by G. Samuel in a 1934 paper describing the transport of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) through solanaceous hosts: “lt is considered that these facts favour the theory of a slow cell to cell movement of the virus via the plasmodesmen, combined with a rapid distribution through the plant via the phloem” (Samuel, 1934). It is now firmly established that plant viruses move from cell to cell and over long distances by exploiting and modifying preexisting pathways for macromolecular movement within cells, between cells, and between organs. In this review, we focus on the roles of vira1 and host components in the movement of viruses through these pathways. Exhaustive coverage of all aspects of movement is not possible, but the reader is referred to several excellent reviews that emphasize various facets of shortand long-range virus transport (Atabekov and Taliansky, 1990; Maule, 1991; Deom et al., 1992; Citovsky, 1993; Leisner and Turgeon, 1993; Lucas and Gilbertson, 1994; Lucas, 1995).
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