PEBP balances apoptosis and autophagy in whitefly upon arbovirus infection. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Apoptosis and autophagy are two common forms of programmed cell death (PCD) used by host organisms to fight against virus infection. PCD in arthropod vectors can be manipulated by arboviruses, leading to arbovirus-vector coexistence, although the underlying mechanism is largely unknown. In this study, we find that coat protein (CP) of an insect-borne plant virus TYLCV directly interacts with a phosphatidylethanolamine-binding protein (PEBP) in its vector whitefly to downregulate MAPK signaling cascade. As a result, apoptosis is activated in the whitefly increasing viral load. Simultaneously, the PEBP4-CP interaction releases ATG8, a hallmark of autophagy initiation, which reduces arbovirus levels. Furthermore, apoptosis-promoted virus amplification is prevented by agonist-induced autophagy, whereas the autophagy-suppressed virus load is unaffected by manipulating apoptosis, suggesting that the viral load is predominantly determined by autophagy rather than by apoptosis. Our results demonstrate that a mild intracellular immune response including balanced apoptosis and autophagy might facilitate arbovirus preservation within its whitefly insect vector.

published proceedings

  • Nat Commun

altmetric score

  • 18.5

author list (cited authors)

  • Wang, S., Guo, H., Zhu-Salzman, K., Ge, F., & Sun, Y.

citation count

  • 16

complete list of authors

  • Wang, Shifan||Guo, Huijuan||Zhu-Salzman, Keyan||Ge, Feng||Sun, Yucheng

publication date

  • January 2022