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Key role of exportin 6 in exosome-mediated viral transmission from insect vectors to plants.

Hong LuJiaming ZhuJinting YuQiong LiLan LuoFeng Cui
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Exosomes play a key role in virus exocytosis and transmission. The exportin family is usually responsible for cargo nucleocytoplasmic trafficking, and they are frequently found in exosomes. However, the function of exportins sorted in exosomes remains unknown. Here, we successfully isolated "cup holder"-like exosomes from the saliva of ∼30,000 small brown planthoppers, which are vectors of rice stripe virus (RSV). RSV virions were packed in comparatively large exosomes. Four viral genomic RNAs at a certain ratio were identified in the saliva exosomes. The virions contained in the saliva exosomes were capable of replicating and causing disease in rice plants. Interference with each phase of the insect exosome system affected the transmission of RSV from the insect vectors to rice plants. Fragmented exportin 6 was coimmunoprecipitated with viral nucleocapsid protein in saliva and sorted to exosomes via interactions with the cargo sorting protein VPS37a. When the expression of exportin 6 was knocked down, the amounts of RSV secreted in saliva and rice plants were reduced by 60% and 74%, respectively. These results showed that exportin 6 acted as a vehicle for transporting RSV into exosomes to overcome the barrier of insect salivary glands for horizontal transmission. Exportin 6 would represent an ideal target that could be manipulated to control the outbreak of insect-borne viruses in the future.
Keyphrases
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • stem cells
  • respiratory syncytial virus
  • respiratory tract
  • poor prognosis
  • bone marrow
  • binding protein
  • current status