真菌学家和病毒学家一致:建议将黑穗病菌用于全球霉菌病毒研究

Viruses Pub Date : 2024-09-18 DOI:10.3390/v16091483
Mahmoud E. Khalifa, María A. Ayllón, Lorena Rodriguez Coy, Kim M. Plummer, Anthony R. Gendall, Kar Mun Chooi, Jan A.L. van Kan, Robin M. MacDiarmid
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引用次数: 0

摘要

霉菌病毒具有高度的遗传多样性,能显著改变真菌宿主的表型,但在基因型和生物学研究中对它们的描述普遍不足。我们建议将黑穗病菌作为霉菌病毒的模型系统,以便深入了解霉菌病毒的流行病学,包括多样性、影响以及宿主与病毒相互作用的相关细胞生物学。在这种真菌宿主中已描述了 100 多种霉菌病毒。B.cinerea是真菌病毒学的理想模式真菌,因为它具有高度可操作性的特点--易于培养、分布于世界各地、可感染多种寄主植物、可进行转化和基因编辑,并拥有丰富的生物资源,包括注释基因组、转录组和基因敲除分离物。将重点放在霉菌病毒的模式系统上将使研究界能够解决非系统方式无法回答的深层次研究问题。由于丝核菌是一种主要的植物病原体,因此新的见解可能会立即产生效用,并能创造新的知识,补充和扩展其他真菌中霉菌病毒单独或与各自植物宿主相互作用的知识。在本综述中,我们阐述了将 B. cinerea 培育为霉菌病毒模型系统所需的一些关键步骤,以及将来如何使用这一系统。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mycologists and Virologists Align: Proposing Botrytis cinerea for Global Mycovirus Studies
Mycoviruses are highly genetically diverse and can significantly change their fungal host’s phenotype, yet they are generally under-described in genotypic and biological studies. We propose Botrytis cinerea as a model mycovirus system in which to develop a deeper understanding of mycovirus epidemiology including diversity, impact, and the associated cellular biology of the host and virus interaction. Over 100 mycoviruses have been described in this fungal host. B. cinerea is an ideal model fungus for mycovirology as it has highly tractable characteristics—it is easy to culture, has a worldwide distribution, infects a wide range of host plants, can be transformed and gene-edited, and has an existing depth of biological resources including annotated genomes, transcriptomes, and isolates with gene knockouts. Focusing on a model system for mycoviruses will enable the research community to address deep research questions that cannot be answered in a non-systematic manner. Since B. cinerea is a major plant pathogen, new insights may have immediate utility as well as creating new knowledge that complements and extends the knowledge of mycovirus interactions in other fungi, alone or with their respective plant hosts. In this review, we set out some of the critical steps required to develop B. cinerea as a model mycovirus system and how this may be used in the future.
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