A Renaissance in Nepovirus Research Provides New Insights Into Their Molecular Interface With Hosts and Vectors

Publication date: Available online 28 September 2016 Source:Advances in Virus Research Author(s): M. Fuchs, C. Schmitt-Keichinger, H. Sanfaçon Nepoviruses supplied seminal landmarks to the historical trail of plant virology. Among the first agriculturally relevant viruses recognized in the late 1920s and among the first plant viruses officially classified in the early 1970s, nepoviruses also comprise the first species for which a soil-borne ectoparasitic nematode vector was identified. Early research on nepoviruses shed light on the genome structure and expression, biological properties of the two genomic RNAs, and mode of transmission. In recent years, research on nepoviruses enjoyed an extraordinary renaissance. This resurgence provided new insights into the molecular interface between viruses and their plant hosts, and between viruses and dagger nematode vectors to advance our understanding of some of the major steps of the infectious cycle. Here we examine these recent findings, highlight ongoing work, and offer some perspectives for future research.
Source: Advances in Virus Research - Category: Virology Source Type: research